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Music : Schub Offers Conventional Recital

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What Andre-Michel Schub played best, at his recital at the South Bay Center for the Arts, Saturday night, was a little Bartok, the famous “Allegro Barbaro” and the also-cherishable “Out of Doors” suite.

In both, the French-born American pianist displayed again his reliable note-honesty and integrated musicality, while adding a measure of personal interest he does not always bring to the fore. There was heat and color in this Bartok, even a sense of conviction.

Schub does not often achieve that much. An accomplished technician whose playing acknowledges stylistic differentiations, the 38-year-old musician seems seldom to project a sense of mission or communication in the music he essays. He pays attention but his energy and, subsequently, any real connection to his audience, often flags.

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His unprovocative Marsee Auditorium recital program needed personality to make it come to life.

It began with Mendelssohn’s “Variations Serieuses,” moved through Beethoven’s still-enigmatic Sonata in A-flat, Opus 26, and the Bartok group, and ended with Schubert: the popular Impromptus in E-flat and A-flat minor of Opus 90, and the “Wanderer” Fantasy.”

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