| Conrad Tao, 17, shows fully mature virtuosity in Rachmaninoff | ![]() | ![]() |
| Written by David Fleshler |
Conrad Tao, a student at Juilliard, performed the Russian composer’s Second Piano Concerto with Symphony of the Americas at the Broward Center, fresh off a performance of a Saint-Saëns concerto with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. He is an amazing dual talent who had previously performed the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto with Symphony of the Americas, and his deep musicality was apparent from the first notes. Lots of pianists can bang their way through this difficult work. But Tao, from the dramatic flair with which he played the first pensive broken chords, showed a natural feel for the concerto’s yearning melodies and restless energy. Although he is clearly a master of the keyboard, his playing was so smooth and fluent that the difficulty of the work was never at the forefront; nor was there ever a hint of the look-how-hard-this-is virtuosity that marks the playing of some young keyboard phenoms. He could be grand, as in the sweeping swirls of notes that open the last movement, and his technical ability was apparent throughout, as he easily handled the rapid chords, runs and other challenges of a concerto composed by one of history’s great virtuosos. But it was his playing of Rachmaninoff’s melodic passages that really distinguished this performance, as Tao’s natural musicality brought out the concerto’s smoky, Romantic quality. The orchestra, to which Rachmaninoff assigns much of the thematic material, was an admirable partner under the assured, attentive conducting of artistic director James Brooks-Bruzzese. Standing ovations are so common these days that they don’t mean that much, but in this case the audience rose immediately after the final chord in a spontaneous and virtually unanimous signal of acclaim. As an encore, Tao performed Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6, a difficult but lightweight work, played by Tao with immaculate technical command.
The concert opened with Rossini’s William Tell Overture, in a performance notable for oddly subdued trombones in the passages in which they normally bark from the orchestra and spirited playing from the strings in the famous final section. Symphony of the Americas seems intent this season on presenting soloists who are too young to vote. Next month the orchestra will present the Bruch Violin Concerto No. 1, with the 11-year-old Austrian prodigy Elisso Gogibedaschwilli as soloist. |











