 Thibaudet opened with Pavane pour  une infant défunte, by Maurice Ravel.  The light sections  of the piece were uplifting, and it was just the right length to set  the mood.  Ravel’s Miroirs followed, in which each movement  has its own personality.  The first, “Noctuelles,” (“Night  Moths”) was fun and spritely, whereas “Oiseaux tristes” (“Sad  birds”) was gloomy and fantastical.  Throughout the arpeggios  of “Une barque sur l’océan,” (“A Boat on the Ocean”) Thibaudet’s  fingers flew up and down the keyboard.  Although no movement offers  a definite conclusion until the end, the audience could not help but  applaud after “Alborada del gracioso,” (“Dawn Song of the Jester”)  with its turn from a mechanical and focused sound to a flourishing dance  rhythm.  The last movement, “La vallée des cloches,” (“The  Valley of the Bells”) presents a sound-sculpture that is not quite  peaceful, but intriguing.
Thibaudet opened with Pavane pour  une infant défunte, by Maurice Ravel.  The light sections  of the piece were uplifting, and it was just the right length to set  the mood.  Ravel’s Miroirs followed, in which each movement  has its own personality.  The first, “Noctuelles,” (“Night  Moths”) was fun and spritely, whereas “Oiseaux tristes” (“Sad  birds”) was gloomy and fantastical.  Throughout the arpeggios  of “Une barque sur l’océan,” (“A Boat on the Ocean”) Thibaudet’s  fingers flew up and down the keyboard.  Although no movement offers  a definite conclusion until the end, the audience could not help but  applaud after “Alborada del gracioso,” (“Dawn Song of the Jester”)  with its turn from a mechanical and focused sound to a flourishing dance  rhythm.  The last movement, “La vallée des cloches,” (“The  Valley of the Bells”) presents a sound-sculpture that is not quite  peaceful, but intriguing.During intermission, someone came out to check the tuning on the piano. Perhaps he was prepping the D-flat for Brahms’s Sonata No. 3 in f minor, Op. 5. Angela Hewitt will play this same piece in February at UMS. I wonder what she will bring to the score, and look forward to comparing the two performers.
Photo: LSA Freshmen Lauren Ruben and Diana Juncaj await Thibaudet’s performance at Hill Auditorium.
A quick glance at the program told  me that the Brahms movements would shift from “dramatic and powerful”  to “gentle and lyrical” and back again.  Prepared to get  lost in the music, I sat back and let my imagination take over.   By the third movement, I felt like I was at a carnival.  The whirlwind  of sounds circled around me, and I could almost see the “color of  music” my conductors have tried to describe to me all these years.  
Before I knew it, the song had ended,  and Thibaudet was up for his third bow of the night.  He was not  quite through, and delighted the audience with an encore piece: Intermezzo  in A, Op. 118 No. 2, also by Brahms.  To me, a new ease seemed  to have come over the pianist as he played this piece: Perhaps from  the confirmation that the audience adored him?  Or was he just  having fun now that the official program was complete?  I cannot  imagine an artist who would not love performing in Hill Auditorium,  and Thibaudet certainly seemed to enjoy himself.  
Although Thibaudet bowed and left the  stage once more, our audience refused to let him go.  He graciously  returned to present the moving melodies of Nocturne in E Flat Major,  Op. 9 No. 2, as a tribute to his mother, who said, “A day without  Chopin is not a good day.”  
Take that one to heart.  Happy  listening! 
By: Catherine R. Herzog
UMS Student Advisory Committee Member
 
 




