Prom 27: Yuja Wang / BBCSO/Mäkelä review – whoops, thrills and a virtuoso masterclass

Royal Albert Hall, London
The star pianist’s control of Rachmaninov left the audience exclaiming ‘How cool is she?’ – while partner Klaus Mäkelä and BBCSO kept up the excitement with a rattling Belshazzar’s Feast

You’ve got to feel for anyone who opens a concert featuring megastar pianist and “elfin, spiky-haired fashionista” Yuja Wang. Her Proms appearance this year alongside 27-year old Finnish conductor Klaus Mäkelä – whose own recent ascent has been vertiginous, and who is also Wang’s partner – generated a capacity audience and a long, hopeful queue for returns.

In this context the festival’s first taste of music by Peruvian composer Jimmy López Bellido was never likely to be headline material. It could, though, have been more than a disappointing starter. Percussion-heavy and harmonically repetitive, the UK premiere of his Perú Negro had rhythmic drive to burn but limited coherence. Mäkelä’s visible enthusiasm, as he bopped around the podium like a guest at a wedding disco, inspired mechanical jauntiness from the BBC Symphony Orchestra. The applause was polite.

One piano-move later and the audience was whooping before Wang had played a note of Rachmaninov’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini. The orchestral attack was incisive, its sound stylishly ferocious. Wang provided a masterclass in chamber-music performance, at times so thoroughly embedded in the orchestra that the solo part appeared to emanate from somewhere other than the grand piano. Elsewhere her fingers danced apparently without effort over large-scale orchestral schmaltz, deftly shaped melodies unmissable through purity of bell-like tone rather than volume. It’s tempting to take Wang’s absolute virtuosity for granted. But the pleasures of watching a pianist dispatch fistfuls of notes too quickly for the human eye without a single wrong note don’t fade. Those thrills-without-spills continued in two encores: a Rachmaninov polka and Vincent Youmans’ Tea for Two. “How cool is she?! SO cool!” squeaked one audience member.

Energy levels remained at fever pitch after the interval in Walton’s Belshazzar’s Feast. The BBC Symphony Chorus was on muscular form and baritone Thomas Hampson was ever-compelling, if underpowered in his voice’s lower reaches for a piece boasting such orchestral heft. Mäkelä’s approach was fast and furious: details aplenty, tutti chords that came down like a guillotine and a constant sense that we were about to career over a precipice. Occasionally it lacked poise – but the excitement was undeniable.

Available on BBC Sounds until 9 October. The Proms continue until 9 September.

Contributor

Flora Willson

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Prom 35: Oslo Philharmonic/Mäkelä review – breathtaking Yuja Wang reveals new depths to Liszt
The pianist gave a virtuosic but exquisitely controlled account of Liszt’s flamboyant First Piano Concerto, on a stunning night at the Proms that also featured exceptional playing of Sibelius and Strauss

Tim Ashley

14, Aug, 2022 @10:40 AM

Article image
Prom 1: BBCSO/Stasevska review – energy, ovations and defiance open season
A programme ranging from Sibelius, Grieg and Britten to a world premiere by Ukrainian Bohdana Frolyak opened the Proms with conductor Dalia Stasevska engaged and outgoing.

Martin Kettle

15, Jul, 2023 @9:23 AM

Article image
Prom 51: BBCSO/Oramo review – Tetzlaff’s Elgar is as good as one could wish
The violinist gave a masterly performance of Elgar’s violin concerto, well matched by a responsive Sakari Oramo. Judith Weir’s nature-filled Begin Afresh, receiving its premiere, was evocative and full of ideas

Martin Kettle

25, Aug, 2023 @3:02 PM

Article image
Yuja Wang – review

The whole picture may not yet be drawn, but Wang's breathtaking control and tender touch confirm her as a pianist of enormous promise, writes Martin Kettle

Martin Kettle

18, Feb, 2014 @3:46 PM

Yuja Wang – review
The Chinese pianist has jaw-dropping dexterity but rarely seeks for depth beneath the pristine surface, writes George Hall

George Hall

02, May, 2012 @5:24 PM

Article image
Yuja Wang /Royal festival hall review – dazzling and brilliant playing
Wang’s flamboyance and virtuosity doesn’t always convey a real sense of what the music is about, but in works such as Ligeti’s Etudes she is irresistible.

Andrew Clements

21, Apr, 2022 @12:23 PM

Article image
Yuja Wang review – expressive performance with a devilish finish
The piano prodigy’s playing was immaculate but calculated through Chopin and Brahms, though she brought the right energy to Scriabin

Andrew Clements

12, Apr, 2017 @11:41 AM

Article image
Leonidas Kavakos/Yuja Wang review – shared detail and purpose
The two virtuosic soloists have a longstanding musical partnership that here produced a wonderful and generous evening of music by Brahms, Janáček and Schumann

Erica Jeal

05, Dec, 2022 @3:59 PM

Music review: Yuja Wang, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London

Queen Elizabeth Hall, London: on the evidence of this recital, Yuja Wang has yet to acquire the understanding to match her formidable technique, says Andrew Clements

Andrew Clements

12, May, 2009 @11:01 PM

Article image
LSO/Roth/Wang review – Yuja Wang dazzles with Lindberg’s imposing Third Piano Concerto
Lindbery wrote his big bravura concerto for Wang – and as a star vehicle it is extremely effective

Tim Ashley

28, May, 2023 @10:08 AM