Piano 2003
Programme CD
Laureats 2003
Set work
Orchestras & Conductors
Jury 2003
Prize list 1952>2003
 
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Introduction

What makes a competition in musical performance great? This is the question when faced with their proliferation over the past fifty years. Just over half a century ago, the Queen Elisabeth Piano Competition had its first, historic, session, dominated by Leon Fleisher. Since then, memories of an Ashkenazy, a Frager, an Afanassiev, an El Bacha, a Braley, have been fused with the present. What about the uniformisation of talent, the internationalisation of schools, the scientific preparation of ‘competition machines’? The 2003 Competition has proved that these worries were exaggerated. The maturity of the Far Eastern countries now being an established fact, the geographic spread of the competition has been enlarged, and the approach to the works, the aural culture, the individual itineraries, the maturity or otherwise of the contestants, all play an equal role: an extraordinarily broad spectrum indeed, and what a pleasure to report it!

The jury, an assembly unique in both prestige and diversity, encountered 24 personalities in the semifinals, of whom the least that can be said is that many deserved further hearing. Only twelve finalists had this honour, being obliged, within a week, and in a sequestered study-room, to master the previously unreleased score of a distinguished composer: this is one of the laws of the ‘Elisabethan tradition’. The dreams of the Australian composer Ian Munro charmed and moved the audience of the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, which was able to follow - like tens of thousands of television viewers - the competitors’ performances accompanied by the National Orchestra of Belgium under the fluid and attentive direction of Gilbert Varga. Yet the favourite moment for aficionados probably remains the semifinals, at the Royal Brussels Conservatory. The intimacy of the recitals was coupled this year with an at times cruel confrontation with the concertos of Mozart, devotedly accompanied by Georges Octors and the Royal Chamber Orchestra of Wallonia.


From all this was to emerge Severin von Eckardstein. Maturity, stylistic plenitude and fullness of sound were combined in him with an indefinable air of culture, exempt of arrogance and show, resulting in performances that were anything but adventitious. We shall be listening again and again to what this young man was able to do under the very difficult conditions, as regards both length and intensity, of the toughest of international competitions. We can but be convinced that the discovery of a true Beethovenian, able to master both a contemporary score and to give such a performance of the Prokofiev Second, is unquestionably to be assigned to the Competition’s credit. Such talent was no doubt needed in order to relegate to second place a young, staggeringly gifted Chinese lad, Wen-Yu Shen - sixteen years old! - ahead of a cohort of laureates, several of whom impressed the public. We shall have the pleasure of meeting them again once the extraordinary bustle of the ‘Queen Elisabeth’ has died down.

Michel Stockhem

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