Mitsuko Uchida, Royal Festival Hall, London

Royal Festival Hall, London

This was a recital that brought out the best in the pianist Mitsuko Uchida - but then that's nothing unusual. Uchida has to be one of the most satisfying performers around. Listen to the sustained, whispered tone she creates in the softest episodes and you can hardly believe the piano is a percussion instrument. But there is plenty of muscle to her performance as well, along with a poised, unselfconscious grace and, most importantly, a formidable intelligence that rarely makes a single note seem superfluous.

The first work to benefit from her cool sensitivity was Schoenberg's Three Piano Pieces, Op 11. At the opening of the first, the disparate elements seemed to converse with each other easily and respectfully, and even the sudden, surprising irruptions of sound dissolved elegantly. And even after the cacophonous first bars of the third, behind the passionate intensity of her playing there was a sense of logic and structure - and, what is more, heart - that is often all too elusive in this music.

From the sense of stillness at the end of the Schoenberg, inspiring absolute silence in the hall for several seconds, grew the opening of Schubert's Op 78 Sonata in G, a seemingly sunny but deceptive piece toying with dance rhythms and innocent turns of phrase and coming up with something poignantly wistful, almost otherworldly. Uchida maintained an understated, music-box calm in the first movement; the shattering climax crept up on us only to evaporate even more quickly, but it cast a knowing shadow over the rest of the movement.

Schumann's Fantasie in C was the last challenge. In the hands of a more gung-ho pianist, this epic work can seem a rambling indulgence, but with Uchida's disciplined approach it made perfect sense. Melodic lines came strongly to the fore while background details remained just that. The taut, initially easy rhythms and rich sonority of the march movement did start to sound a little effortful towards the end, but in the final movement, with its glancing references to Beethoven, there were moments of extraordinary intensity.

Uchida shook her head when an overenthusiastic punter applauded before the last note had quite faded; moments later she was laughing and nodding vigorously, and we needed no persuasion to respond.

Contributor

Erica Jeal

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Mitsuko Uchida, Royal Festival Hall, London

Royal Festival Hall, London

Andrew Clements

25, Mar, 2005 @12:10 AM

Mitsuko Uchida | Classical review
St George's, Bristol
Uchida's playing was even more compelling and communicative in an unusually intimate setting, writes Andrew Clements

Andrew Clements

26, Sep, 2010 @9:15 PM

Mitsuko Uchida, St George's, Bristol

St George's Bristol

Rian Evans

12, Jan, 2008 @11:44 PM

Classical review: Mitsuko Uchida, Royal Festival Hall, London

Royal Festival Hall, London
Uchida's greatness as an interpreter lies in her care to passages that might be overlooked, says Erica Jeal

Erica Jeal

21, May, 2009 @11:06 PM

Mitsuko Uchida, Barbican, London

Barbican, London

Erica Jeal

07, Apr, 2006 @8:31 AM

Mitsuko Uchida, Royal Festival Hall, London

Royal Festival Hall, London

Andrew Clements

15, Dec, 2003 @12:37 PM

Congratulations, Mitsuko Uchida

This year's BBC Music Magazine's top award couldn't have gone to a finer musician ...

Andrew Clements

09, Apr, 2008 @3:30 PM

Mitsuko Uchida – review

Schumann's G minor Sonata Op 22 showed Uchida at her imaginative, poetic best – a thrilling, sustained burst of pianistic energy, says Andrew Clements

Andrew Clements

07, Mar, 2013 @5:44 PM

Mitsuko Uchida – review
Playing Schubert's last three piano sonatas in a single recital is a huge challenge but Uchida's performance was spellbinding, writes Andrew Clements

Andrew Clements

24, Apr, 2012 @4:41 PM

Article image
CD: Schubert, Piano Sonatas, Mitsuko Uchida

(Philips)

Andrew Clements

15, Nov, 2002 @2:03 AM