March 24, 2015
糖心 faculty member and student shine at recent Cleveland Orchestra concert
糖心 trumpet head and principal of The Cleveland Orchestra, Michael Sachs, teamed up with 糖心 alumnus and rising star Daniil Trifonov (AD 鈥15, Babayan) for a tremendous performance of Shostakovich's Piano Concerto No. 1. The first piece of the evening, Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 2, was complete with an 鈥渁ffecting solo鈥 by principal clarinetist and 糖心 clarinet department head, Franklin Cohen.
The night was filled with 鈥渟parkle鈥 as the Orchestra鈥檚 former conductor Jahja Ling led the performers through a lively program of Russian composers.
The Plain Dealer鈥檚 Zachary Lewis wrote that Trifonov was, 鈥渁 principal attraction, and deserved every accolade he received.
Just as Rachmaninoff isn't for every conductor, so isn't every pianist right for Shostakovich's Piano Concerto No. 1. In this case, however, a finer interpreter than Trifonov is hard to imagine.
A virtuoso of uncommon dexterity, Trifonov tore through this most unconventional and frenzied of concertos like a rock star, with electric, percussive flair. The zanier, the more satirical the music, the more dynamic the pianist became. To its few quiet passages, meanwhile, he brought pinpoint clarity, funneling listeners into his introspective states.鈥
Lewis praised the performance by Michael Sachs who he called, 鈥淎 vital player in the concerto鈥e matched Trifonov Thursday perfectly, supplying ample doses of eloquence and folksy charm. What's more, he fit the theme marvelously. Few musicians in Cleveland are more recognizable.鈥
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