Pianists Charles Owen and Katya Apekisheva presented a lively recital programme in what might be better described as ‘an orchestral concert for two pianos’; such was the range of sounds the two were able to conjure from their instruments.
Milhaud’s Scaramouche Suite was a frothy, joyful opener, as one might expect from a member of ‘Les Six’ in a work based on theatrical music. The stomping samba rhythms of the finale were delivered with great aplomb by the ever-exuberant Apekisheva. It was a pleasure to see the musicians clearly enjoying themselves throughout.
The melancholic Suite No. 1 revealed Rachmaninov at his most elegiac. The dark colours of the opening were punctuated by nimble-fingered trills, while later, majestic themes ascending in sequence carried echoes of the sweeping melodies of the Second Piano Concerto and Second Symphony. The third movement, subtitled Les Larmes (Tears), was built upon a single repeated melodic figure which gradually grew in intensity against a background of shifting kaleidoscopic patterns. This minimalist approach continued into the final movement, where the chiming of Russian Easter bells provided a rhythmic ostinato. Here the composer wavered, alternating between major and minor tonalities as if unable to decide, before finally settling on the prevailing darkness.
Ravel’s La Valse balanced the easy lilt of the waltz theme with more demonic interludes. The rapid flourishes were delivered with consummate ease, including an exciting double-glissando played on black and white notes simultaneously. Despite the complexity of the texture, the performers maintained a sparkling transparency that belied the challenging nature of the work. The risk when performing a programme on two concert Steinways is that the sound becomes too overpowering and monotonous, but Owen and Apekisheva managed to avoid this throughout with a sensitive and imaginative performance.