Pianist Simon Trpceski has been billed as “the best thing to come out of Macedonia since Alexander the Great”.
While Trpceski has never successfully invaded Persia, he shares with his fellow Macedonian a certain uncomplicated boldness and a flair for the conquest of difficult obstacles, as evidenced by his fresh, athletic performance of Rachmaninoff’s second piano concerto with a well-oiled Singapore Symphony Orchestra (SSO) under the inspired nonagenarian conductor Eliahu Inbal.
This was a performance of dynamism, dexterity and Mediterranean directness, not the hypnotic concentration of a Sviatoslav Richter or the patrician eloquence of a Garrick Ohlsson (who played the work with the SSO in a very different interpretation two years ago).
Trpceski is a natural showman who revelled in tricky passages with the elan of a magician pulling a rabbit out of a hat. The outer movements were taken at a thrilling pace, to great effect in some of the more frenetic moments such as the piano’s keyboard-spanning entrance in the last movement
However, the same movement’s coda felt less like an exhilarating summit push and more like a breathless scramble towards the finish line.



