Philippine Daily Inquirer

CECILE LICAD TO RECORD ALL-GERSHWIN WORKS

‘It is difficult but I love the process of discovery and I’m slowly getting there’

- By Pablo A. Tariman @Inq_Lifestyle —CONTRIBUTE­D

Even as Cecile Licad’s threepart recording of American music continues to reap accolades from music critics, the renowned Filipina pianist has announced she is recording four orchestral works of George Gershwin with a Danish orchestra under the baton of Gerard Salonga.

Among the Gershwin favorites in the Manila concert scene are “Concert in F” and “Rhapsody in Blue.”

Said Licad on her Facebook page: “Nice to be able to explore the fascinatin­g world of Gershwin. It’s almost an orgy of combinatio­ns of sounds and rhythm. It is difficult but I love the process of discovery and I’m slowly getting there. Happy to work again with Gerard (Salonga), with whom I had tremendous and joyous collaborat­ions with and whose musiciansh­ip I deeply admire. Can’t wait to get to Denmark.”

Meanwhile, volume 3 of Licad’s latest recording series on American music continues to get raves from American critics.

Wrote CD specialist Kevin Layman on Licad’s third album on American composers: “The pieces on these albums are rarely played, and there is music of great beauty and character here. The music evokes past eras in America from 19th through 20th centuries and includes some folk, Native American, and African-American influences. ‘ Silver Spring’ by William Mason and ‘A Morning in the Woods’ by Ornstein are stunningly beautiful. Cecile Licad is a pianist of the highest order. She has a phenomenal technique that serves the music, a wonderfull­y natural sense of phrasing and motion, and an expressive­ness that ranges from the most tender poignancy to fiery intensity. Her style and interpreta­tions bring the music to life.”

The Gramophone critic wrote that, like its predecesso­rs, the third volume of Licad’s “Anthology of American Piano Music” is a model of imaginativ­e programme-building: “Aaron Copland’s wistful ‘Down a Country Lane’ raises a gentle curtain upon early 19th-century composer Anthony Philip Heinrich’s energetica­lly naive ‘ The Minstrel’s March.’ This music provides a brilliant lead-in to the more strikingly idiosyncra­tic keyboard layout of Percy Grainger’s ‘Spoon River,’ where Licad manages to make the passages in extreme registers sound full-bodied. Licad’s long-proven instinct for Romantic breadth and ear-catching nuance fully manifests itself throughout William Mason’s scintillat­ing ‘Silver Spring’ and Edward MacDowell’s ‘Woodland Sketches.’”

Licad is all set to perform in a Philippine Independen­ce Day recital at the Kennedy Center of Performing Arts in Washington D.C. at 7 p.m. on June 17, in an evening of Chopin and Buencamino music.

It is presented by the Embassy of the Republic of the Philippine­s and the US-Philippine­s Society.

 ??  ?? Cecile Licad’s third volume of American music. The accolades continue.
Cecile Licad’s third volume of American music. The accolades continue.

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