From composition to performance, the season opener at the Riverside
County Philharmonic offers an authentically Russian presentation.
No need to travel to Carnegie Hall to hear a prodigious pianist tackle
Rachmaninoff's "Concerto No. 2 in C Minor." Seventeen-year-old Natasha
Paremski will take the stage Saturday to play the Romantic composer's
work.
"I think the best thing about doing this is it's one
of the best concertos in all of music," Paremski said by phone. "It
evokes so much emotion."
| | Courtesy Of The Riverside County Philharmonic | |
Seventeen-year-old Natasha Paremski will be on stage Saturday for the
Riverside County Philharmonic's season opener. | | | |
Conductor Patrick Flynn agreed.
"It's the last of the big Romantic concertos," he said by phone. "From
there on, things really changed in music."
Flynn had heard
about Paremski through other music directors. So when her agent, Dana
Ramos, contacted him a year and a half ago, he arranged to listen to
her play in Northern California. He found that her technique fits the
music perfectly.
"She's got a remarkable style," he said.
"It's an old Russian (style), a particular confidence and way of
phrasing, which is distinctly Russian."
"I'm not trying to be 'Russian,' " she said. "I just kind of play the way that I feel," Paremski said.
Although the Russian-born pianist has lived in the United States since
1995, she's already played with some of the world's most prestigious
orchestras, including the San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles
Philharmonic and the Colorado Symphony.
She's recorded two
CDs with the Moscow Philharmonic, graduated high school at 14,
currently studies at Mannes College of Music in New York and has
international performances scheduled through 2006.
"There
are some soloists who have the ability to touch your heart immediately
when they play," Flynn said. "You should immediately think 'Oh, yes,
that's the way it should be played.' Those are the people who become
stars."
When Riverside County Philharmonic last presented
the same piece 15 years ago, Wendy Chen, another rising star in the
orchestral music world, played piano.
The Philharmonic
will also play Shostakovich's "Symphony No. 5," which Flynn says is a
great complement to fellow Russian composer Rachmaninoff.
"There has to be some sense of unity and contrast in a program," Flynn
said. "Shostakovich has a hard edge... There's dissonance. He's very
graphic."
As Flynn explains it, "Symphony No. 5" saved
Shostakovich's life. Literally. He wrote the piece to please Stalin,
who threatened to kill him if his next composition criticized his
regime.
"It's brilliant because (it) managed to critique
him in a way that could slide under the ear of Stalin and his censors,"
Flynn said. "Only true musicians would get the slight out of it."
Reach Erin Auerbach at (951) 368-9599 or eauerbach@pe.com