With more than 30 million YouTube channel views, there is simply no doubt that Valentina Lisitsa is already a classical music star to contend with. Not content with being any ordinary internet superstar, in the run-up to her Royal Albert Hall debut, the Ukrainian pianist uploaded videos of her practice sessions, announced her intention to stream the concert across the globe, and even went so far as to allow the audience to pick the programme via the internet.
I would be lying if I said I wasn’t sceptical about the whole thing being a little bit gimmicky. I suspected that the programme would be full of showpiece favourites, but while the programme was indeed smattered with a few concert-hall classics, Lisitsa actually reminded us why these pieces are indeed famous, without once stooping to meaningless technical fireworks.
Before the playing even began, Lisitsa endeared herself to the audience with a heartfelt welcome, raising a smile by suggesting the first piece could be ‘thrown under the bus’ for the benefit of latecomers and press photos. However, the Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody no. 12 grabbed the audience’s attention from the off, sparkling with a polished yet rustic vibrancy, everything perfectly placed under her fingers. Next was the Mozart Fantasy in C minor, K475, probably the weakest item on the programme – not for musical or technical reasons (it was virtually flawless) but merely because for such a staggering virtuosic and musical talent, it seemed too small a vehicle to completely showcase her skills. To follow, she played Liszt’s transcriptions of three Schubert songs. Lisitsa’s approach was more Lisztian than Schubertian, but always in good taste and with careful regard to the stories behind the pieces. The transcriptions were as expressive as the original sung versions despite the technical difficulties – most pianists would balk at having to play the accompaniment part for Erlkönig, let alone the vocal part as well, but the different voices of the characters came across clearly even without words, and the mysterious elven king was both enticing and terrifying. Finally, Lisitsa finished the half with Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata. The Adagio was taken at a somewhat faster pace than normal (a little too fast even by 19th-century standards), but suitability aside, it was refreshing to feel the piece move as opposed to the sugary languorous dragging to which some pianists subject the movement. The Allegretto was delightful – Lisitsa even smiled as she began to play, and her enjoyment was infectious. The Presto agitato bubbled along with contained agitation, and swept the first half to a close, followed by rapturous applause that demanded two bows.