The phrase “national treasure” gets overused, but in the case of Arvo Pärt, you can’t really argue. So on a first visit to Estonia, there was no doubt about coming to a concert at the Arvo Pärt Centre, set in a pine forest near the composer’s home on the Baltic coast some 40km from Tallinn. The Centre was opened three years ago and its 150 seat concert hall is an oak box-within-a-box thing of beauty, sounding as good as it looks. This was also a chance to see one of the young artists that we’ve interviewed: 23-year old violinist Hans Christian Aavik was performing music with pianist Karolina Žukova to launch their debut album, entitled Aeternus.
From the start, the programme certainly didn’t lack ambition: the Chaconne from Bach’s Violin Partita no. 2 in D minor is one of the behemoths of the solo violin repertoire, requiring virtuosity both at a technical level (all those double stops and fast passagework) and at an architectural level (the need to develop a coherent structure both for individual phrases and the overall arc of a piece lasting nearly a quarter of an hour). At the technical level, Aavik’s playing was not to be faulted: his timbre was good, as was his sense of building a phrase, and he was particularly impressive at the points where the music turns into a long series of clusters of four semiquavers which cross the strings, playing with dexterity and evenness, without slowing the pulse of the music even by a fraction.
A more experienced artist on a less crucial occasion might have felt able to take more risks: bolder attack on those double stops, greater variation in dynamics and colour as the music moves from one wave to the next. Aavik’s Chaconne is impressive, but it’s by no means the finished article: there’s more emotional intensity available to be extracted from this iconic work.