Sound Decision
Piano
by Jonathan Mays,
For the better part of four months, I've done my best to shed some light on the largely unexplored world of anime music. But I also have a larger goal: to share my love of music with the diverse audience of Anime News Network. With that in mind, I'd like to take a quick detour from anime and invite you to enjoy my account of a remarkable musical event.
Pianist Ayako Tsuruta is a well-traveled artist with a performance resume that spans Europe, the Middle East, and North America. She's appeared as a soloist with groups like Portugal's Figueira da Foz and the Juilliard Symphony in New York. It's easy to be impressed by such a list of accomplishments, but they're just words on a sheet of paper until you've actually witnessed her musical talents. Last Sunday afternoon I had such an opportunity, as the visiting assistant professor graced Rogers Whitmore Recital Hall with her presence.
Faculty recitals never attract large crowds, but on a Sunday afternoon in the middle of football season, the turnout was even smaller. Senior citizens, parents who dragged along their middle schoolers, and a handful of students who needed attendance credit composed most of the diminutive crowd. But the intimate hall made it quite easy to forget the size of the audience. I arrived early, sitting quietly for about half an hour before the start of the performance.
Ms. Tsuruta appeared in an elegant black dress, bowed slowly, and took her place in front of the Bösendorfer grand piano.
As the pianist lowered her hands to her side, a warm applause followed. Tsuruta left the stage, then returned, then left again. Making her second return trip to center stage, she interrupted the clapping with a few words. "I'd like to thank everyone for attending, especially my parents, who flew in from their home in Michigan. Today is their 34th anniversary. And, in fact, today is also my 33rd birthday."
When an impromptu applause began to fade, Tsuruta added a final note. "For my final piece, I would like to perform the Valse allemande, my favorite movement from Carnaval."
Silence fell instantly upon the recital hall, as every last member of the audience realized they were witnessing not a concert but a heartfelt present from a loving daughter to two profoundly proud parents. The short piece that followed was not the most impressive or even the best performance of the evening. (Tsuruta stumbled on two notes towards the end.) But it was undoubtedly the most compassionate of Ayako Tsuruta's lyrical love letters.
Carnaval is often criticized for its spots of crudeness and immaturity, but as I then understood, it was the perfect selection for such an occasion. Passionate. Flawed. Intensely personal. Tsuruta showed her parents how far she's come in 33 years, but she also reminded them how little she's changed. There's no way I can fully understand how Tsuruta or her parents felt that afternoon. But I do know it was an experience that will remain with me always, a fulfilling Sunday that demonstrated one more conduit of music's power.
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Pianist Ayako Tsuruta is a well-traveled artist with a performance resume that spans Europe, the Middle East, and North America. She's appeared as a soloist with groups like Portugal's Figueira da Foz and the Juilliard Symphony in New York. It's easy to be impressed by such a list of accomplishments, but they're just words on a sheet of paper until you've actually witnessed her musical talents. Last Sunday afternoon I had such an opportunity, as the visiting assistant professor graced Rogers Whitmore Recital Hall with her presence.
Faculty recitals never attract large crowds, but on a Sunday afternoon in the middle of football season, the turnout was even smaller. Senior citizens, parents who dragged along their middle schoolers, and a handful of students who needed attendance credit composed most of the diminutive crowd. But the intimate hall made it quite easy to forget the size of the audience. I arrived early, sitting quietly for about half an hour before the start of the performance.
Ms. Tsuruta appeared in an elegant black dress, bowed slowly, and took her place in front of the Bösendorfer grand piano.
- Sonata in C Major, Op. 2 No. 3
I. Allegro con brio
II. Adagio
III. Scherzo: Allegro – Trio
IV. Allegro assai
- Sonate
I. Allegro con moto
II. Lied
III. Choral et Variations
- Carnaval: Scene mignonne sur quatre notes, Op. 9
Preambule
Pierrot
Arlequin
Valse noble
Eusebius
Florestan
Coquette
Replique
[Sphinxes]
Papillons
A.S.C.H. – S.C.H.A.
Chiarina
Chopin
Estrella
Reconnaissance
Pantalon et Colombine
Valse allemande
Paganini
Aveu
Promenade
Pause
Marche des "Davidsbundler" contre les Philistins
As the pianist lowered her hands to her side, a warm applause followed. Tsuruta left the stage, then returned, then left again. Making her second return trip to center stage, she interrupted the clapping with a few words. "I'd like to thank everyone for attending, especially my parents, who flew in from their home in Michigan. Today is their 34th anniversary. And, in fact, today is also my 33rd birthday."
When an impromptu applause began to fade, Tsuruta added a final note. "For my final piece, I would like to perform the Valse allemande, my favorite movement from Carnaval."
Silence fell instantly upon the recital hall, as every last member of the audience realized they were witnessing not a concert but a heartfelt present from a loving daughter to two profoundly proud parents. The short piece that followed was not the most impressive or even the best performance of the evening. (Tsuruta stumbled on two notes towards the end.) But it was undoubtedly the most compassionate of Ayako Tsuruta's lyrical love letters.
Carnaval is often criticized for its spots of crudeness and immaturity, but as I then understood, it was the perfect selection for such an occasion. Passionate. Flawed. Intensely personal. Tsuruta showed her parents how far she's come in 33 years, but she also reminded them how little she's changed. There's no way I can fully understand how Tsuruta or her parents felt that afternoon. But I do know it was an experience that will remain with me always, a fulfilling Sunday that demonstrated one more conduit of music's power.
discuss this in the forum
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