Accomplished pianist Paul Roberts visits Smith Hall

Chrys Weedon | Entertainment Editor

Paul Roberts can be described as many different things: a writer, lecturer, teacher and pianist. Piano expert Bryce Morrison wrote that “Paul Roberts is an exceptional musician, a fine and deeply sensitive pianist, teacher and an author of the greatest distinction.” Morrison added that “his books on Debussy and Ravel are quite simply the most outstanding and perceptive I have read.”

Roberts has regularly performed in Portland since 1999, according to his website paulrobertspiano.com. Roberts is the artistic director for the international piano summer school, Music at Chateau d’Aix, in France, and also teaches at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama in London. Roberts has written three books and is in the process of writing a fourth.

On Feb. 20, Paul Roberts came to perform in Smith Music Hall. In a performance of two acts, Roberts played selections by Debussy, Liszt and Albeniz.

The first half of the performance consisted of pieces composed by Debussy, an Impressionist composer from the late nineteenth century. The second act consisted of compositions from Liszt and Albeniz. Liszt is a composer from the Romantic era; Albeniz, the post-Romantic era.

Before each section, Roberts explained the individual pieces he was going to play, so the concert was a mixture of lecture and actual performance. On Portland Piano International’s website, portlandpiano.org, founding artistic director Harold Gray wrote that Roberts’s “public lectures immerse the listeners in a magical world of images and ideas … his communicative abilities, whether as performer, writer or teacher, are without equal.”

Roberts’s playing style is passionate and highly expressive. His’ clear enthusiasm for his work brings to mind the concept of “a calling.” Roberts plays with his entire body and moves along with the pieces he plays. He paints a clear picture with his musicality and captivated the audience with his lecture of the history behind each piece.

 

Contact the author at howlentertainment@wou.edu

Photo courtesy Ashlynn Norton