Last night was a memorable evening with Japanese superstar pianist and composer Hayato Sumino tinkling the ivories in a show-stopping performance at The Orpheum.
There were concerns the tickets would not sell out like Carnegie Hall a few weeks ago -- but the Vancouver venue was packed with music lovers, Japanese fans and the rest of us eager to watch Sumino make his debut with the Vancouver Recital Society.
| An upright piano adjacent to the grand piano |
And the 30-year-old delivered finesse and more, with a two-hour concert (with an intermission) that flew by. On stage was a Steinway grand piano, and perpendicular to it, another Steinway, but upright, with the front panel removed to reveal its strings and hammers.
In the first half of the concert, Sumino played Bach's Chromatic Fantasie and Fugue in D minor BWV 903, and Chopin's Nocturne in C minor, Op. 48 No. 1, and Scherzo No. 1 in B minor, Op. 20.
In between Bach and Chopin Sumino played his own compositions, one a riff off of the latter, Recollection (after Chopin). Sumino's own works sound like movie scores, ranging from a bit of drama to tenderness, his fingers caressing the keys.
During the intermission fans rushed towards the stage to take selfies with the two pianos. They seemed to anticipate something more amazing was going to happen, and they were right.
The first half was just the prelude to what Sumino was capable of. He walked on stage and with a microphone greeted the audience and explained he had a big cat and the next piece he was playing was called Big Cat Waltz in a dedication to this cat who likes to jump around.
And indeed one could imagine a furry feline jumping onto the piano, or trying to distract his master from practicing on the keyboard.
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| Sumino has a science and engineering degree |
In some parts he played the melodica with his right hand, while his left stayed on the grand piano; he went back and forth to playing the small instrument to the piano, and then ended with such an energetic finish!
He left the stage and moments later returned to play Ravel's Bolero. When the orchestra plays this work, it's the drummer who has the toughest job keeping a steady beat, but here it's Sumino who has to keep his "drum" going. He went to the upright piano and with a piece of felt fabric, the hammers on the piano created a gentle thud that he started and then was able to continue automatically.
Sumino straddled both pianos at first, and then focused mostly on the grand piano, continuing the drumming with his left hand throughout while slowly building the crescendo in the nine-minute piece. What dexterity and talent! We all jumped to our feet after!
| Vancouver got three encores |
He performed Chopin's Etude in C major, Op. 10 No. 1, the audience couldn't get enough so he came back and played Kapustin's Toccatina No. 3 from Eight Etudes Op. 40, and again the crowd was clamouring for more and Sumino played his signature 7 Variations on Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star.
Throughout the concert Sumino looked like he enjoyed playing the piano and re-interpreting the music he way he likes to play it. At the age of three he began learning the piano, but when he was in university he studied science and engineering at the University of Tokyo's Graduate School of Information Science and Technology. He graduated just as the pandemic was starting in March 2020. He was also a drummer who wanted to play in a rock band!
But perhaps the piano was calling him, as two years earlier he won the Grand Prix at the 42nd PTNA Piano Competition, a Japanese piano competition, which helped start his fan base at home.
In 2021 he participated in the XVIII International Chopin Competition in Warsaw (where Canadian Bruce Liu won), and Sumino advanced to the third round.
He also seems to enjoy performing with other people, from fellow pianists to orchestras; when he played his own arrangement of An American in Paris, it would have been even better with him performing with a bassist, saxophonist and drummer, each with their own solo.
Nevertheless, Sumino has done a lot for classical music, garnering a lot of young fans thanks to his Youtube videos, showing them classical music doesn't have to be stuffy and boring!



























