Worldly/Local Pianist Hélène Grimaud Returns to Santa Barbara’s Lobero
Celebrated Pianist is Part of CAMA’s ‘Masterseries’
To borrow a notion from Jean-Luc Godard’s film Two or Three Things I Know About Her, there are at least two or three things one should know about the much-celebrated pianist Hélène Grimaud. She is a passionate champion and protector of the wolf kingdom, who launched the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem, New York. She is a resident of Santa Ynez, when not out making the world her home. She is also one of the world’s finest and most distinctive classical and personal classical pianists and interpreters. Lastly, Grimaud will make a welcome return as recitalist at the Lobero Theatre on Wednesday, December 7, part of CAMA’s “Masterseries” and one of the most anticipated events of the 2022 classical music year in town.
The French-born artist’s Lobero program is a treasure chest of piano literature options. Robert Schumann’s classic Kreisleriana takes up the second half, preceded by a sampler plate of short-ish works by composers well-known for their piano music — Chopin, Satie, and also the living Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov, whose music is the focus of Grimaud’s latest release in her Deutsche Grammophon discography. Silvestrov, who left Kyiv this year to escape the Russian aggression against his country, now lives in Berlin and is known for his lyrical and tonal neo-classical style, tinged by post-modern instincts.
Although Grimaud works with orchestras and in various chamber music contexts, working in recital mode is especially rewarding for her. “It’s really like nothing else when you are playing alone,” she said. “It’s like a religious experience. Nothing compares to a solo recital.”