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Tucson Symphony Orchestra Classical Concert Grieg Piano Concerto

TSO Classical Concert
Friday, November 17th 7:30 pm
Sunday, November 19th at 2 pm
Grieg Piano Concerto

Drew Petersen, winner of the 2017 American Pianists Awards and the Christel DeHaan Fellowship of the American Pianists Association, has already achieved an enormous amount at the age of 23, including graduating cum laude from Harvard when he was only 19. But he is awed by the fact that a number of famous composers had already written their masterworks by the time they were his age. “I am performing Chopin’s Piano Concerto in E minor in concert this season, and I find myself thinking, ‘How in the world could Chopin have written this when he was only 20? It’s too good!’” he says.

Likewise, the Piano Concerto in A minor by Edvard Grieg that he will play with the TSO was written when the composer was just a year older than Petersen is now. The piece is a grand, crowd-pleasing work, filled with beautiful melodies and plenty of opportunities for the performer to showcase the full range of the piano.

This is the first time Petersen has performed the Grieg with a full orchestra, and he notes that the biggest challenge for him will be “to make it my own, and not take it for granted, and realize that there’s more to it than just a superficial understanding that we all have of the piece.”

He points out that when it was first composed it immediately earned some very enthusiastic supporters. “I heard a story that Franz Liszt once had the opportunity to meet Grieg, and Liszt decided to play the concerto, alternating between the orchestra and solo parts. And Liszt loved the piece, particularly this wonderful moment where in the last bars Grieg changes one of the major themes of the final movement. He writes it originally in a typical, classical scale pattern. But the last time it appears he changes it to give it an unusual—especially Norwegian—quality. And the story goes that Liszt gets to that moment, sees the changed note on the page, and before he plays it, he stands up from the piano and storms around the room, singing the tune with the new note and shouting how ecstatic it is.”

Petersen gravitated toward the piano (thanks to the presence of one in his family’s home) as a toddler, and begged his mom to teach him some things. When he outgrew what she knew, formal lessons soon followed. But that wasn’t the only endeavor for which he showed aptitude early on: he also was a competitive swimmer, and continues to find time to enjoy pool or ocean swimming when he can. “Swimming and music are really compatible from the standpoint of the physical activities themselves,” he observes. “It’s all about efficiency of movement. It’s all about doing as much as we can with as minimal movement as possible.”

That’s not to say that the charismatic virtuoso is just kicking back. Along with his hectic tour schedule, he found free moments to record an album of 20th Century American works, which will be released on the Steinway & Sons label. Among the featured works will be two piano sonatas written by multi-Pulitzer Prize-winning giants Samuel Barber and Eliot Carter.

Young as Petersen is, he has already fully embraced the role of being an ambassador for classical music, ensuring that compositions both famous and obscure continue to be played. “Being able to be close to great masterpieces of civilization on a regular basis is amazing,” he says. “Just sitting at a piano all alone and playing through the Grieg concerto is wonderful. But traveling all over the world and sharing what I love with so many people is even more incredible.”

TCC Music Hall · 882-8585 · tucsonsymphony.org

Acclaim for Drew Petersen

“This young man [Drew Petersen]’s performance of the treacherous Rach 3 was absolutely perfect — tantalizing, bombastic, dreamy, scary, soothing, everything it should be.”

1

“A truly magnificent performance. I don’t believe I’ve ever heard Rachmaninoff played as well. I especially loved the tender touch and emotion that he put into his playing.”

2

“That was an incredible performance tonight! I have never heard Rachmaninoff’s 3rd played so sensitively. He found the nuances I’ve never heard before tonight.”

3

“The rehearsal left me feeling like I was walking on a cloud. Drew IS the music! Extraordinary playing!”

4

“…Pianist Drew Petersen gave a riveting performance of the Gershwin. He found the sweet spot between classical correctness and jazz freedom, using rubato like an expressive, crooning, jazz singer, and tossing in accelerando moments to playful effect in some spots and urgent effect elsewhere.”

— Elaine Schmidt, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

 

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Profile: Drew Petersen Pianist, Winner of Avery Fisher Career Grant

A profile of pianist Drew Petersen, winner of a 2018 Avery Fisher Career Grant Award.

— NYC-ARTS Profile

 

NYC-ARTS Profile

“That is what is so astonishing about Drew…that he feels the music, he can make it come alive again, make you touched by it… That’s what is unusual. That’s what I like about him. He is not just a child prodigy but is a brilliant musician.”

— Lukas Foss, composer, conductor, pianist

 

Lukas Foss

“confident and assured”

— Cathalina Burch, Arizona Daily Star

 

Arizona Daily Star

“Three of the six finalists played Rachmaninov, but only one brought anything fresh or arresting to these overfamiliar works. That was 21-year-old American Drew Petersen, who – inexplicably as far as I’m concerned – only placed fourth; his account of Rachmaninov’s First Concerto was the best of the six performances in the final by some distance, and he perfectly captured the music’s youthful ebullience and glitter.”

— Andrew Clements, The Guardian

 

Andrew Clements

“The 2017 American Pianists Awards’ top prize — carrying a $50,000 cash prize and entailing much career assistance over the next two years as Christel DeHaan Fellow of the American Pianists Association — went Saturday night to Drew Petersen, a 23-year-old from Oradell, New Jersey, and a master’s degree candidate at the Juilliard School. The announcement capped two days of “Gala Finals” with five candidates for the award each playing a major concerto.”

— Jay Harvey, Upstage

 

Jay Harvey Upstage 2017

Young pianist returns and wows them again

“… he plays the music as the composer intended. There is none of the mannered, exaggerated choreography of many of today’s piano virtuosos.”

Read More…

— Shelter Island Reporter

Shelter Island Reporter

“…with his playing of Chopin’s Nocturne No. 8 in D-flat major, that the miracle of being a prodigy came wondrously to the fore. It seemed as though Drew Petersen instinctively understood that Chopin was spinning a long, contemplative dream-that the filigree lights and shadows of this hushed work contained the sophisticated languors of a yearning heart.
To hear a 10-year-old boy breathe life and romantic subtlety into so expressive a work, is to encounter the true mystery of what makes so very young a person leap
toward the flames of artistic maturity.”

Read More…

— John Jonas Gruen, The East Hampton Star

The East Hampton Star

“It was a kaleidoscope of interpretations that struck the ear most when in April the finalists in the American Pianists Association’s season-long contest played Judith Lang Zaimont’s “Attars,” the commissioned work of this year’s classical piano competition.

And that was just one of the ways in which Drew Petersen made his mark on his way to winning the 2017 contest. Despite my reluctance to choose favorites while a competition is in progress, Petersen had won me over last January with his revelatory performance of Robert Schumann’s problematic “Humoreske.”

— Jay Harvey, Upstage

 

Jay Harvey

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