Yundi Li presented a recital of tried and true audience favorites at Herbst Theatre on Sunday, under the auspices of San Francisco Performances. Some of them he has played here before. I went to the theater hoping to gain some insight into the artistic imagination of this acclaimed young artist. I left dazzled, puzzled, and wishing for more substance along with the pyrotechnics that these days seem to be the measure of all things pianistic.
Widmung, which certainly felt more like Liszt than the heartfelt song of its composer. There was hardly any repose to be found, even at the words "Du bist die Ruh," which seemed to require agitation and the need to produce a big effect. Surely Liszt, despite his liberal use of arpeggios up and down the keyboard, would not have approved distorting the piece's meaning.
Listeners might have wondered why he placed this piece, which is often given as an encore, at this point in the program. By closing the first half of the concert with Chopin's Andante Spianato and Grande Polonaise (the latter being another work that usually brings on the bravos at the end of a concert ), Li revealed both his great strengths as a virtuoso and the limitations of this approach to program building.
He also set himself a challenge for the second half of the concert. Although he left no doubt that he can fire off octaves with the best of them, I felt that he was trying to outdo himself. The result was speed at the expense of substance, and power trumping poetry.
Photo by Gunter Glücklich/DG
The program began with works that, above all, require refinement to make their effect. The Mozart Sonata K. 330 got a highly polished reading that brimmed with enthusiasm and the sense of how much fun it must be to be a world-class wunderkind. It was followed by four Chopin mazurkas, Op. 33. Li pulled the tempos this way and that, searching for a rhythm that is as elusive as it is bewitching when found. The first piece seized my attention with its aching melancholy, and I could barely catch my breath through the lively one in D major, taken at a clip too fast for any dancers I could imagine. The C-major mazurka is the simplest of the set, and it seemed to have caused Li to doubt that Chopin's music was reaching us. In any case, the liberties he took with the written dynamics of the final mazurka in B minor upset its delicate balance of pathos, gloom, and wistfulness. He then scratched the announced but overplayed Nocturne in E-flat and went directly to the Schumann-Liszt