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Double Dream/Letters To Milena, Kings Place, London

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  • Double Dream/Letters To Milena, Kings Place, London

    DOUBLE DREAM/LETTERS TO MILENA, KINGS PLACE, LONDON

    Independent.co.uk
    Tuesday, 24 February 2009

    If classical improvisation is difficult, it's doubly so when the goal
    is transposition into jazz; how two pianists can combine together
    in this way is hard to imagine. But for the Russian pianist Mikhail
    Rudy, two heads have long been better than one. His defining infant
    experience was hearing phrases which came through the wall from a
    violinist who was practising next door, and finding he could answer
    him on the piano. Later in life, rehearsals for Double Dream - in
    which he and the Ukrainian pianist Misha Alperin would turn Bach,
    Chopin, and Debussy into jazz - have had, for logistical reasons,
    to take place over the telephone.

    And with their Steinways interlocking in the perfect acoustic of
    Kings Place, we heard the results. They started with the lights
    down, opening with a rumination on Schumann's "Prophet Bird" which
    rang out gorgeously in the gloom, then, with twin video screens
    focusing on hands and faces, they embarked on the most extraordinary
    classical/jazz conversation I've ever heard. Sometimes the classical
    pieces were first played straight, and then ingeniously messed with -
    subverting a poised Chopin mazurka by suddenly dropping it a semitone,
    letting a Debussy Etude with a walking bass suddenly run so fast that
    it took off into space. Using a cross between a bagpipe and a mouth
    organ, Alperin launched into an Armenian dance by Komitas, which Rudy
    countered with mournful Arabic octaves; Stravinsky's "Petrushka"
    came in obliquely and stratospherically high, then found its feet
    in a majestic full-dress performance. A dainty tune by Haydn seemed
    to close the proceedings, was blown to smithereens by monumental
    crashing chords, then resurfaced like a perfumed musical box amid
    smoking ruins: in this interplay between seriousness and mockery,
    nothing was what it seemed for very long.

    The following night's collaboration was between Rudy and the actor
    Peter Guinness: in Letters to Milena, Kafka's love letters to his young
    paramour were accompanied by a selection of pieces from Janacek's
    In the Mists and On an Overgrown Path. The result was hauntingly
    dramatic: the morose urgency with which Guinness infused the words
    was answered by a kaleidoscope of emotions from the piano; each art
    form was enriched by the other.
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