New Year, New Stars

I would like to wish everybody a very happy and musical new year. It’s never too late for greetings. I hope that you all had a fun and safe holiday season.

This year I plan to attend some live performances for the first time. I already bought tickets to see two of my favorite pianists, Jan Lisiecki and Daniil Trifonov this spring.

Let’s start this year by checking out some beautiful music performed by up-and-coming artists.

Catalpa Piano

Catalpa Piano is a new YouTube channel created in September 2021.

This wonderful pianist has studied the piano since the young age of 4 and also studied in ESMUC in Barcelona.

Please subscribe to Catalpa Piano’s YouTube channel and follow her on Instagram @catalpapiano.

She posts new videos every Wednesday and Saturday at 18:00 (Japan time).

Watch as Catalpa performs a beautiful, energetic rendition of Chopin’s Ballade No. 1.

Shuenda’s Musical Diary

Shuenda Wong also started his YouTube channel in September 2021. His channel is a practice journal and a place for his thoughts on music, education, and research. He is a current Doctoral Student of Music Education and is Principal of EPS Studio.

Please subscribe to Shuenda’s Musical Journey.

Watch as Shuenda performs Scriabin’s Etude Op. 42 No. 5.

We are blessed to have such talented people in this world. They truly bring joy to our hearts.

Be on the lookout for more featured talent as I continue to explore the wonderful world of classical music.

Classical Music Era

Photo by cottonbro from Pexels

Before I started exploring the world of classical music, I had considered the entire thing as one era. I was unaware of the different periods until I began learning to play the piano in 2021.

While reading about music theory and researching some of the great composers, I was introduced to the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic eras.

As it turns out, the majority of the music had I loved prior to taking up piano lessons is from the Romantic or late-Classical eras. Upon discovering this, I set out to find more music from the Romantic era.

I find the complexity of the piano during this era to be quite appealing to me. It sounds so difficult, maybe even impossible, yet so beautiful.

I found a piece by Sergei Rachmaninoff called Prelude in C Sharp Minor. It immediately became my favorite piece.

I decided to search online for videos of pianists playing Prelude in C Sharp Minor and found an old classic by Josef Hofmann. His rendition turned out to be the best I had heard. Watching him play is just jaw-dropping. The way he seemingly clubbed at the chords just amazed me. There was such precision in a hand movement that looked anything but precise.

I watched this video over and over and over. Every single day I listened to recordings of this piece by Mr. Hofmann, and others. I started searching for more videos of pianists playing this piece when I stumbled upon a video of Yuja Wang performing another one of Rachmaninoff’s famous pieces.

I never did find a video of Yuja Wang playing Prelude in C Sharp Minor. Instead, I was introduced to two other great pieces – Prelude in G Minor, Op. 23, No. 5, and Prelude in B Minor, Op. 31, No. 10.

Yuja Wang’s performance of these two pieces mesmerized me. I was blown away by the movement of her hands and the expressions on her face. I could see in her the emotion that one must feel not only as a listener, but as a performer. It looked as if she was taken to another world during these performances.

As I was new to the piano, I wanted to draw inspiration from everything I listened to, read, or watched. I was immediately drawn to how Yuja Wang’s fingers seemingly worked magic on the keys.

I started to watch Yuja Wang’s Rachmaninoff performances with a steady eye on her fingers… studying the complex movement and positioning in awe. Although I am still merely a beginner, I credit her with helping me get comfortable with the keys.

I then discovered Evgeny Kissin and Valentina Lisitsa. I am amazed every time I watch these great virtuoso pianists perform. It seems like every week I find another pianist who plays so beautifully that it touches my battered heart and soul.

As it turns out, the video of Josef Hofmann playing Prelude in C Sharp Minor was the only video ever made of him. A timeless classic in my eyes.

It seems to me that the Romantic era was filled with emotion. Pieces such as Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 18 – 2. Adagio sostenuto tug at my emotions.

While listening to these wonderful pieces, I experience a sense of sadness, loss, hurt, hope, aspiration, triumph, power, and greatness. Some parts nearly bring me to tears but eventually bring me up as if I climbed a mountain after surviving a great tragedy. The crescendo brings me up to the peak of the mountain from where I can view a brighter future and start a new journey.

The hiker above the sea of fog
Wanderer above the Sea of Fog (c. 1818). 94.8 × 74.8 cm, Kunsthalle Hamburg