The New York Times classical music
critic Anthony Tommasini gave a rave review to the Dec. 11 Carnegie Hall
recital debut of Sheku and Isata Kanneh-mason. Being there myself I can
agree with what Tommasini says. It was one of the finest, most
stimulating concerts I've seen in years.
As the NY Times says in it's review "Mr.
Kanneh-Mason is a gifted, sensitive artist. And in the demanding works
this duo performed — especially Rachmaninoff’s rhapsodic and teeming
Sonata in G Minor, which has a virtuosic piano part — Ms. Kanneh-Mason
was a superb collaborator."
In 2016, the
British cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason won the prestigious BBC Young
Musician of the Year Award. Early in 2018, his debut recording on the
Decca label was released, including his arrangement of Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry,” which has been streamed more than 11 million times on Spotify.
But
this attention paled next to the overnight fame he achieved from a
single performance in May 2018, when he played during the wedding of
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, watched on television by an estimated
1.9 billion people.
On Wednesday, things were decidedly more intimate when Mr. Kanneh-Mason,
20, gave his New York recital debut in Carnegie Hall’s 268-seat Weill
Recital Hall, alongside his slightly older sister, the pianist Isata
Kanneh-Mason. (Her own Decca album, of works by Clara Schumann, has just
been named to The New York Times’s list of the best classical recordings of the year.)
Mr. Kanneh-Mason is a gifted, sensitive
artist. And in the demanding works this duo performed — especially
Rachmaninoff’s rhapsodic and teeming Sonata in G Minor, which has a
virtuosic piano part — Ms. Kanneh-Mason was a superb collaborator.
The program, available in its entirety at wqxr.org,
opened with Beethoven’s 12 Variations on “Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen.”
The jaunty theme comes from Papageno’s song in Mozart’s “The Magic
Flute,” in which the rustic bird catcher explains that what he wants
most in life is a loving wife. From the first statement of the theme in
Beethoven’s jolly arrangement, Mr. Kanneh-Mason brought out the wistful
subtext of the music, the yearning and loneliness the character feels,
with rich, focused tone and elegant phrasing. As the variations grew in
intricacy and inventiveness, these impressive musicians responded with
crisp stylishness.
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