Pianist Raul Sunico |
Featuring:
Raul
Sunico, piano
Programme:
Robert
Schumann
Fantasiestücke,
Op. 12
Isaac
Albéniz
Iberia Suite, El
puerto and Triana
Richard Wagner/Franz Liszt
Liebestod from
Tristan und Isolde
Nicanor Abelardo
Nocturne in C
sharp minor
Antonio Molina
Malikmata
Franz
Liszt
2 Légendes, S.175
Johann
Strauss/Adolf Schulz-Evler
An der schönen blauen Donau, Op. 314 The Blue Danube
World
renowned pianist Raul Sunico showcased his vast repertoire at a concert held recently
at the residence of German Ambassador Thomas Ossowski. Less than a month after
setting a record by playing three Tchaikovsky piano concertos in a single
concert, Sunico performed a totally different lineup of solo piano pieces in
front of an intimate audience of selected guests.
German Ambassador Thomas Ossowski and Raul Sunico Photo courtesy of the German Embassy |
After
welcome remarks by Ambassador Ossowski, the concert commenced with Sunico
performing Robert Schumann’s Fantasiestücke,
Op. 12. A suite made up of eight short pieces that made for quite a hefty
concert opener as the music journeyed through the realm of dreams and possibly nightmares.
Sunico followed it up with two pieces from Isaac Albéniz’ Iberia Suite which were El
puerto, a lively depiction of a busy fish port and Triana, named after a gypsy quarter in Seville and infused with the
dances paso doble and the sevillana. There was no mistaking the Spanish
character and flair of the Albéniz’ music. It was indeed a revelation to hear
these Albéniz pieces performed by a solo pianist since the more often performed
orchestral arrangement is more familiar to me. A soaring Franz Liszt
transcription of Richard Wagner’s Liebestod
from Tristan und Isolde was
brilliantly rendered by Sunico right from the unsettling “Tristan chord” at the
beginning up to the piece’s stirring climax with the piano resonating as if there was a symphony orchestra inside the living room.
DTI Secretary Gregory Domingo and wife Rowena, Raul Sunico, and Luisa Zaide |
Filipino
music was also represented that night through Nicanor Abelardo’s sublime Nocturne in C sharp minor and Antonio
Molina’s mysterious Malikmata. Sunico
was able to conjure images with his rendition of Franz Liszt’s 2 Legendes, S.175.
The
lightness of St-François d'Assise La
prédication aux oiseaux made me imagine that it was the small, friendly
birds and not the birds of prey that he was preaching to. But the weighty and
grand chords of St-François de Paule Marchant
sur les flots brought imagery of turbulent waves that he was able to sail
through via an improvised raft and sail after getting denied by a ferryman to
carry him.
Diether Ocampo and Raul Sunico |
For
the finale, Sunico went for the crowd pleasing Adolf Schulz-Elver’s
transcription of Johann Strauss’ An der schönen blauen Donau, Op. 314 more popularly known as The Blue Danube. While the popular waltz melody takes centerstage, 20th
century harmonies and dissonances included by Schulz-Elver gave it modern
sensibilities. Not wanting the concert to end, one of the guests requested a
certain Franz Schubert piece which Sunico unfortunately didn’t know. To satisfy
the lady’s Schubert request, he played the composer’s lyrical Impromptu in G flat major, Op. 90 No. 3 instead
for an encore.
RAd and Ambassador Thomas Ossowski |
Raul
Sunico’s concert was organized by Ambassador Thomas Ossowski and the German Embassy to promote cultural dialogue and also to celebrate the friendship
between the Philippines
and Germany .
Among the guests in this evening included NCCA Chairman Felipe de Leon Jr., DTI
Secretary Gregory Domingo, Swiss Ambassador Ivo Sieber, Monaco Consul Fortune
Ledesma, eminent music critic Rosalinda Orosa, actor Diether Ocampo and
equestrienne Michelle Barrera, and of course, members of the German community
residing/working in the Philippines.
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