Wednesday, October 23, 2024

BBC Young Musician 2024

23 October 2024

I've followed the biennial BBC Young Musician competition closely since it started in 1978 and I have written here about it every two years since 2006. You can read all my previous posts about BBC Young Musician at: http://culturaldessert.blogspot.com/search/label/BBCYoungMusician. BBC Young Musician 2024, which came to its climax last weekend, saw some significant changes to the format, doing away with the instrumental categories that have defined the competition since it began. Rather than separating the contestants into strings, woodwind, brass, piano and percussion until the grand final, this year 50 young musicians were auditioned to select the 12 best players, regardless of instrument. Two quarter finals and a semi-final then reduced the field to 3 for the concerto final (broadcast on Sunday). I was surprised how well this radical change worked: it allowed the same three judges to oversee the entire competition (rather than having specialists for each of the instrument categories) and by broadcasting excerpts of all 50 auditions the television audience saw many more young musicians than in previous years and saw more of those who made it right through to the final, building our understanding of their personalities and musicality. But the lack of categories did seem to further favour string players and pianists (who were already the most common overall winners of the competition) - with no brass players or percussionists (and only two wind players) making it beyond the initial auditions. (Though I suppose you could argue that the category format may have previously prevented many more outstanding pianists or string players from getting to the concerto final.) The standard of contestants seemed even higher than in previous years, with many 'wow' moments throughout the various rounds. And I think Sunday's concerto final at Bristol Beacon was one of the best ever, in that I think all three finalists will go on to be well-known professional musicians - comparable with the 2016 final (which featured Sheku Kanneh-Mason, Ben Goldscheider and Jess Gillam - now firmly established as the perfect TV presenter for BBC Young Musician). But I did have some criticisms of the final. After the 2022 final restored the incredible spectacle of a concert consisting of five full concertos it was a great shame that we were restricted to three concertos again this year. And, by doing away with the instrumental categories, for the first time ever the final featured two musicians playing the same instrument. The fact that both pianists then chose to play the same concerto (Rachmaninov's 2nd Piano Concerto) was an amazing and fascinating twist but even further reduced the sense of the final as a concert. Comparing two very different performances of the same work was surprisingly compelling - and reminded me of the experience of playing the Rachmaninov 2nd Piano Concerto with the Northampton Symphony Orchestra in two consecutive concerts in 2019 with two different pianists who took contrasting approaches to the piece (reviewed here in October and November 2019). I was also disappointed that the concerto final was not broadcast live. Knowing that it had been recorded a few weeks ago made me paranoid about accidentally reading something online that would give away who won - making me feel like Bob and Terry in that episode of 'The Likely Lads' where they are desperately trying to avoid finding out the result of a football match so they can watch the highlights later without knowing. The insights into each movement of the concertos provided by BBC National Orchestra of Wales conductor Ben Gernon were really interesting and helpful but inserting these video clips between the movements in the broadcast ruined the atmosphere of the live performance. I was surprised by the dropping of the tradition of a performance at the end of the concerto final by the winner of the previous BBC Young Musician competition and the disappearance of the Walter Todds Bursary, previously awarded to a performer or performers who show great promise but do not reach the Final. But these are minor quibbles: the TV coverage continues to be beautifully put-together, entertaining, serious and respectful. And all three 2024 finalists - Ryan Wang, Shlomi Shahaf, and Jacky Zhang - gave thrilling performances, with Ryan Wang an outstanding winner.

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