When the Rachmaninov Third Piano Concerto in D Minor appears on a piano recital, and it is performed by a local 16-year-old high schooler, it is truly a cause of interest and celebration.
Chloe Pang, a supertalented student at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, ended her Saturday recital at the Conservatory with a powerful performance (with faculty Miles Graber on second piano) of the Rachmaninov, whose technical and dramatic challenges can evoke fear and trepidation even in the most seasoned of pianists.
Pang seemed to take on the challenges fearlessly, like a young colt eager to trot off on a new, exciting adventure. The piece started with the beautiful, nostalgic theme that is so unmistakably Russian, and then rose in a flurry of marvelously light, virtuosic embellishments that Pang played at scintillating, lightning speed.
When the music became romantically heartfelt, though, as in the lush second theme, she played tenderly, with a bit of restraint. The second movement, rich and deep in color, begins with another typically Russian theme, both tender and melancholic.
In the finale, Pang suddenly unleashed her inner demon, which allowed the performance to grow in dramatic intensity toward the climactic coda, where every last resource of the pianist is called upon to bring this piece to a triumphant conclusion. The audience responded with a howling ovation.