Â鶹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾ç

The Mary Bevan Recital

Patrick Pan playing piano
Date 19/06/2022 at 19.30 - 19/06/2022 at 21.30 Where Lee Hall, Â鶹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çCollege

Join us for our annual Mary Bevan concert with prize winners from the Cambridge University Musical Society Concerto Competition

Patrick Pan playing piano

Mary Bevan was a Senior Member and a great supporter of Â鶹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çCollege.

Mary will be remembered through The Mary Bevan Recital, which her husband, the late Professor Hugh Bevan, Honorary Fellow, funded in her honour.

 

Programme:

Mark Ziying Zang – Piano (at 7.30pm)

Sonata-Idyll in G major, Op. 56 1937                     Nikolai Medtner (1880-1951)

  1. Allegretto cantabile
  2. Allegro moderato e cantabile

The fourteenth and final of Medtner’s piano sonatas, the Sonata-Idyll represents a dramatic emotional shift from the complicated and dense music of the two preceding sonatas. A calm, pensive introductory movement gives way to a more standard sonata-allegro form, which, after an exciting coda, gradually disappears into the air.

 

Sonata in B minor 1853                                           Franz Liszt (1811-1886)

  1. Lento assai – Allegro energico -
  2. Andante sostenuto -
  3. Allegro energico – Andante sostenuto – Lento assai

Dedicated to Robert Schumann, and perhaps Liszt’s greatest work, the Sonata is a cornerstone of the Romantic piano repertoire. Revered by pianists and academics alike, this 30-minute piece proceeds without break, featuring just about everything, including extreme virtuosity, longing melodies, and formal ingenuity.

 

Patrick Pan – Piano (at approx 8.30pm)

Robert Schumann's Papillons and ¶Ù²¹±¹¾±»å²õ²úü²Ô»å±ô±ð°ù³Ùä²Ô³ú±ð are two suites of short pieces that nominally depict scenes at a masquerade ball.

Papillons Butterflies, Op. 2 1831                               Robert Schumann (1810-1856)

Papillons, a suite of 12 short movements, is more light-hearted and literal in its portrayal of dance—many of its pieces could actually be used to waltz—although the distinct character of each piece contributes to an underlying dramatic tension.

 

¶Ù²¹±¹¾±»å²õ²úü²Ô»å±ô±ð°ù³Ùä²Ô³ú±ð, Op. 6 1837                               Robert Schumann (1810-1856)

Dances of the League of David

The drama intensifies in ¶Ù²¹±¹¾±»å²õ²úü²Ô»å±ô±ð°ù³Ùä²Ô³ú±ð, which depicts Schumann's inner conflict between his passionate and exuberant side (which he nicknamed "Florestan") and his thoughtful other half ("Eusebius"). Despite their outward similarities, Papillons and ¶Ù²¹±¹¾±»å²õ²úü²Ô»å±ô±ð°ù³Ùä²Ô³ú±ð represent different sorts of dance: the former consists of dances for the body, the latter dances for the soul.

 

Â鶹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾ç the performers:

Mark Ziying Zang

Mark began studying piano at the age of 4, before going on to study piano at the Purcell School of Music. There, he also began studies in composition and organ, which led him to an organ scholarship at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he completed his undergraduate studies in Music before beginning a Master’s degree in composition this academic year.

Patrick Pan
Wolfson’s Brian Moore Accompanist Scholar, Patrick Pan is studying towards a BA in Philosophy. He has a Master of Music in piano performance from the New England Conservatory and a BA in computer science from Harvard. Patrick was a recent finalist and prize-winner in the Cambridge University Music Society Concerto Competition.

 

 

Admission free. No need to book.

A retiring collection will be shared between Diabetes UK and Â鶹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çCollege Music Society.

There will be a drinks reception at the interval.

What's on

Silhouette of a cross with a soft-focused background.

Michaelmas Term College Service

12/11/2024 at 18.15

Wolfson's termly College Service led by our ecumenical Chaplaincy Team.