‘I am deeply honoured to have been chosen as a Spotlight Artist for the LSO’s 2023/24 season. From my initial experience with the Orchestra at the Paris Philharmonie to our concert performances in London and filming during the pandemic, have always been moved by the artistry and passion of the musicians. Collaborating with Sir Simon Rattle, Sir Antonio Pappano, and Susanna Mälkki in music by Rachmaninoff, Ravel, Ades and Gershwin is inspiring and, together, the opportunity to share the thrill of these compositions with our listeners in London and on tour is a joyful gift.’
“…since conductor Kirill Petrenko and the pianist harmonize perfectly in their somewhat nervous and at times explosive performance in the first movement. The Adagio sostenuto is fluid and not at all cloying. And in the Allegro scherzando the sparks fly. Where Trifonov (with Nézet-Séguin) needed 12’16, and most recordings show more than 11 minutes, Gerstein and Petrenko with 10’40 are even faster than Khatia Buniatishvili and Paavo Järvi (10’43). Yet one never gets the impression that the playing is rushed. On the contrary, the music benefits from the sharpened contrasts between slow and fast parts of the movement, and the virtuosic coda is absolutely electrifying.”
These words from Komitas’s “Antuni” capture the loss, displacement and trauma that haunts Armenians today as ethnic cleansing in Artsakh/Nagorno Karabakh has forced more than 100,000 out of their ancestral lands. We share this recording in solidarity with the Armenian nation.
With Ruzan Mantashyan, soprano
Antuni / Homeless
My heart looks like shattered homes,
Broken are pillars and timbers asunder.
Wild birds will nest in those ruins…
To reach the river, jump in it I wish,
And to become food for the fry of fish.
Ah, your home is destroyed!
I’ve seen Black sea with the white around,
The waves were beating, yet unable to mix them together,
Who has ever seen an ironic sea?
A homeless’ heart is In bewildered state,
Oh, don’t be my heart darkened so much, Ah, your home is destroyed!
The recording project to pair the late music of Debussy with Komitas’ compositions stemming from the horrors of World War 1 and the Armenian Genocide started two years ago. We did not want to imagine that it would poignantly become even more relevant due to the tragic events unfolding in September 2023.
The Rachmaninoff 150 album has just been awarded by the German “Quarterly Critic’s Choice” in the category “Orchestral Music & Concertos”, with the following praising words: “It may be hard to believe with a work as widely played as the second Rachmaninoff concerto, but there really is something new to discover here: This recording is audibly different from the many new concert recordings that were released for the “Rachmaninoff Year” in 2023 are. Elegant and almost light, powerful without being ostentatious and ostentatious, astonishingly bright in its timbres and highly intelligent in the interaction between soloist and orchestra.
The two Kirills – Gerstein and Petrenko – confidently refute all prejudices against the composer and his work, which unfortunately still exist.”
Kirill Gerstein’s performance of Gershwin’s Piano Concerto in F, with Sir Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra was praised by many critics, read a few here:
Financial Times
The Telegraph
The Guardian
inews.uk
Kirill Gerstein’s next encounter with Robin Ticciati and the DSO Berlin is coming up, with two concerts at the Berlin Philharmonie and one concert at Alte Oper Frankfurt.