MUSIC REVIEW : Cheng Recital Opens Piano Spheres Series
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The exact point at which musical novelties join the mainstream repertory is difficult to gauge. But that point marks the place where audiences suddenly appear.
A crowd of connoisseurs gathered Tuesday night at Neighborhood Church in Pasadena, when Piano Spheres, the recital series exploring soon-to-be-standard repertory, began its second year with a bracing program by Gloria Cheng.
Cheng has done it before; now, she continues to build an audience for the unfamiliar. Her agenda on this occasion included music by the young Pierre Boulez, Esa-Pekka Salonen and John Adams, the middle-aged Olivier Messiaen and the older Elliott Carter, Johannes Brahms and Terry Riley.
Variety this menu had in abundance. It also made sense, moving steadily from true miniatures--Boulez’s colorful “12 Notations” of 1945 and Salonen’s witty “Yta II”--through more expansive canvases by Messiaen and Riley.
Cheng handled Messiaen’s boldly complicated “Canteyodjaya^” (1949), which climaxed the first half, with virtuosic aplomb and easy projection. She also dominated Riley’s recent “The Heaven Ladder,” Book 7, which, in its West Coast premiere--with the composer present--was the high point of the post-intermission.
Riley’s suite, in an eclectic, mid-century style, utilized Cheng’s brilliant technical resources while sprawling all over a loose half-hour. It is highly attractive, but it’s also lightweight.
Salonen’s brief, bright, light and super-difficult piece, reveals dry but irresistible humor and a wonderful palette of pianistic effects.
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