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Premierebuy the music 28-31 May 2009 Bass Performance Hall, Fort Worth, TX
Semi-Finals of the 2009 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition
Mariangela Vacatello, Kyu Yeon Kim, Di Wu, and Michial Lifits Instrumentationsolo piano
Duration9'
Program NoteI. Toccata
II. Sarabande III. Aria IV. Medley Suite for Piano has four thematically related movements: The first movement, Toccata, is a virtuosic rondo whose first theme is a fugue subject I wrote as a student at Juilliard during the early eighties and always wanted to have some fun with, and a jazzy little riff based on an octatonic scale. The second movement, Sarabande, is written in the spirit of Leonard Bernstein's Anniversaries and is a musical portrait of my mother. Aria began as the very first sketch for my opera Amelia; in the story a little girl sings this music as an apostrophe to the stars. The final Medley takes a fragment of the traditional Irish ballad The Croppy Boy and subjects it to some brutal compositional chiaroscuro as it is intercut with ideas from the previous movements. I am a pianist, so I set myself specific challenges for each movement: the first highlights touch and velocity, the second voicing, the third a long singing line and pedaling, and the last dramatic shifts in color, tempo, and dynamics. — Daron Hagen, 2009
ReviewsHagen's four-section Suite was well-presented, especially a folksy third section, gently pulsing, interrupted by just a tinge of disquiet [by Van Clibrun Competition semifinalist Mariangela Vacatello].
--Chris Shull, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 5/29/09
I'm even more jazzed about Di Wu [who] proved again that my favorite movement in Hagen's Suite for Piano is the aria, when a haunting melody drifts into a prairie scene from a Copland ballet -- and then, on a note, back again.
--Chris Shull, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 5/31/09
Hagen's Suite for Piano was also intelligently and effectively crafted [by pianist Michail Lifits], from its popping, pointillistic Toccata to a Medley which revisited the piece's previous movements by mimicking material -- but also color, weight and attitude.
--Chris Shull, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 5/31/09
Mariangela Vacatello's premiere of Daron Hagen’s Suite for Piano (another of the required new pieces) introduced a pleasant work of varied character, at times playful, lyrical and stormy. She played it from memory and made an impressive advocate.
--Olin Chism, KERA Art&Seek, 5/28/09
At first blush, I enjoyed the Hagen piece – its octatonic, virtuosic fugue in the first movement, the lyrical second and third movements, and the helter-skelter finale. I expect it will stand up to repeated hearings.
--Matt Erikson WRR Classical 101.1 FM, 5/28/09
[Michail Lifits'] version of the Hagen Suite was full of character, imagination and sincerity; the lyrical lines in the middle movements were beautifully delineated. This was easily the best performance we heard, and I'm willing to admit that there's more to it than I had thought.
-- Gregory Allen, Performance Today, American Public Media, 6/2/09
Michail Lifits then turned to the Hagen suite and gave it, from memory, the best performance of the competition. This could win the Best Performance of a Commissioned Work award.
-- Mike Winter, Van Cliburn Foundation Competition Blog, 6/1/09
The Hagen suite had not been favorite commissioned work until now. [Di Wu] sure knows how to bring it to life. Once again, the crisp, fast playing sparkles; the lyrical bits are eloquent and tender, and the incisive bits really have bite. What a difference a performer makes! Again: brilliant.
-- Mike Winter, Van Cliburn Foundation Competition Blog, 5/30/09
Vacatello made a fetching case, though, for the Hagen, progressing from chatting Toccata to flowing Sarabande, from dreamy Aria to stop-and-start Medley. — Scott Cantrell, Dallas Morning News, 5/29/09
Die knapp zehnminütige "Suite for piano" des 1961 geborenen Amerikaners Daron Hagen war mit ihren vier motorisch dichten, oft perkussiv geprägten Miniatur-Sätzen eine eher launige Einlage. [Performed by Michail Lifits.]
--Wiesbadener Tagblat, 12/3/09 — , ,
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