Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • [APPLAUSE]

  • LANG LANG: Good morning.

  • Thanks for being here.

  • I'm very happy to be here for the second time.

  • But the first time I wasn't on this stage.

  • I was just visiting the office.

  • It's a very cool office, I must say.

  • And so I prepared some morning songs for you to wake up.

  • So a few Chopin pieces.

  • I will start with one of the very beautiful nocturnes and

  • then one or two etudes, and then a Chopin waltz.

  • So hopefully, we will get really waked after 20 minutes

  • of performance.

  • Thank you.

  • [APPLAUSE]

  • [PIANO MUSIC - CHOPIN]

  • [APPLAUSE]

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Hello, I'm Jeff Spurgeon from WQXR, New York's

  • classical station, 105.9 FM, online at wqxr.org.

  • You may not know, because nobody told you,

  • this is Lang Lang.

  • He's a classical pianist, reasonably well known

  • all over the globe.

  • And it's quite a wonderful thing to hear you play.

  • Let me ask you, what was your warm-up for

  • this just this morning?

  • Did you warm up this morning?

  • When's the last time you touched a piano?

  • LANG LANG: I didn't warm up.

  • I woke up around 10:20.

  • I'm like, oh, god.

  • And we were running like crazy down the street to get here.

  • And I'm really grateful that you are here

  • today waiting for me.

  • And thank you very much.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: It's really wonderful.

  • [APPLAUSE]

  • JEFF SPURGEON: It's extraordinary to have all that

  • music just in your hands, just at your command.

  • But that's what you do.

  • LANG LANG: By the way, Rubinstein said-- one of the

  • greatest pianists.

  • And he said he has 60 piano concertos in his head.

  • And basically during his 70s or 80s he said

  • just call me up.

  • Wake me up in the middle of the night-- like,

  • let's say, 4:00 AM--

  • and I can play whatever piece you want, in concert level.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Well, I believe it.

  • But so can you.

  • But so can you.

  • He had a little more practice over time than you so far.

  • But you'll be there.

  • In China, Lang Lang is credited with influencing some

  • 40 million kids to take up classical piano.

  • Now, I know that 40 million is not maybe a

  • huge number at Google.

  • But still, it's a reasonably large number of people to

  • persuade to take up.

  • And when you think about all the pianos that have to be

  • made, and all the music that has to be printed, and all the

  • lessons that have to be paid for, I would say that you are,

  • without question, classical music's greatest job creator.

  • [LAUGHTER]

  • JEFF SPURGEON: I don't think there's anybody who's going to

  • do more than that than you are.

  • Lang Lang's new album on the Sony label is "The Chopin

  • Album." It contains, at its heart, the Opus 25 set of a

  • dozen etudes, studies for piano, that you have been

  • studying since I think you were what?

  • Eight is when you started to play those things?

  • LANG LANG: Yeah, I started to play the Chopin

  • Etudes when I was eight.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Took them on the road when

  • you were 12 or 13?

  • LANG LANG: Yeah, I played the complete etudes when I was 13.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Right.

  • LANG LANG: And it was very tiring to play those pieces.

  • I mean, it drives me nuts and drives my neighbors nuts.

  • [LAUGHTER]

  • LANG LANG: I really feel bad about it, you know.

  • Recently, I started practicing at my apartment here and

  • started practicing the Chopin etudes.

  • And then my neighbor knocked at my door.

  • And he said could you stop?

  • Could you stop?

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Really?

  • Did they really?

  • You're making that up.

  • LANG LANG: No, no.

  • I mean, there's a one neighbor who knows who I am, so she's

  • always like, oh, that's really wonderful.

  • But then another neighbor, I think, living downstairs--

  • because I always like to practice after 11:00 to find

  • inspiration.

  • [LAUGHTER]

  • LANG LANG: And this lady, I think she

  • hate me all the time.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: So you've been playing these since you were

  • eight, playing them in public since you were 13.

  • Why record them now?

  • Why not a little earlier?

  • Why not wait a couple more years?

  • Maybe the wine will mellow a little more in the bottle.

  • Why decide to do these now?

  • LANG LANG: Ever since I'm 30, I like to do some more

  • repertoire which I played a lot when I was a kid and also

  • putting in some new pieces.

  • I actually thought to do the 24 etudes to

  • complete the cycle.

  • But actually, I thought maybe I should do something, not

  • just technical pieces, but also very artistic pieces

  • combined for the Chopin first solo for me to

  • record and also to hear.

  • I was actually watching the video that I did when I was

  • 13, playing the complete etudes.

  • And I find a few wrong notes.

  • I'm like, yeah.

  • But I'm now playing a few of those pieces, like the "Winter

  • Wind" and the "Ocean" etudes.

  • Now it feels slightly easier--

  • slightly.

  • So that seems like a good sign.

  • After 17 years of practice, my technique is going somewhere.

  • But more importantly, it's the musical sense.

  • There are so many new things I'm trying to interpret in

  • this album to try to find different colors, like you

  • have here, different levels of colors and the combination of

  • the styling of Chopin, and the romantic period of repertoire.

  • And especially last year, I did Liszt.

  • So I thought this was a nice momentum to do Chopin.

  • So next year will be very different.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: What's next year?

  • LANG LANG: Next year I will do Prokofiev and Bartok.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Wow.

  • OK.

  • LANG LANG: So it's very, very different--

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Gnarly.

  • LANG LANG: --approach.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Yeah, totally different.

  • A totally different world.

  • There's some unusual pieces on this album.

  • The "Andante spianato" and "Grande polonaise." big

  • favorite of yours, done with orchestra sometimes, but

  • there's the solo version.

  • You've always liked this piece?

  • LANG LANG: Not really.

  • I mean, when I was a kid, I hated it.

  • Because no matter how great the works are, if there are so

  • many pianists playing the same piece not at a very good

  • level, then you will feel kind of bored.

  • And so that exactly happened when I was a kid.

  • I heard so many interpretations of this piece

  • that I got totally overwhelmed.

  • And I didn't like it.

  • Then I came to America.

  • And I studied at Curtis in Philadelphia.

  • Do you know the Philly cheese steak?

  • It's pretty good.

  • Anyway, in Philadelphia, a boy from Kiev, he also studied

  • with the same teacher as me, Gary Graffman.

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Gary Graffman.

  • LANG LANG: And he played in the student recital.

  • I was shocked by his playing.

  • I'm like, wow, this piece is spectacular.

  • And then I started to loving this piece.

  • Thanks to him, of course.

  • And so sometimes one amazing performance really changes

  • your entire view of a work.

  • And that's what happened in the "Spianato" and "Grande

  • polonaise."

  • JEFF SPURGEON: Nocturnes.

  • You played, actually, a wonderful cross-section of the

  • album just a few minutes ago.