Venue was Fuente de Artes (Ingrids residence) in Magallanes Village; guest of honor was former First Lady Imelda Marcos, unmatched patron of the arts in her time.
In the duo selections, Ingrids role as soloist inevitably made greater impact; Reynaldo, playing the orchestral part, was the gallant and admirably responsive accompanist. Having performed 240 concerts as a duo since January 2001 in 13 bi-annual tours all over the Philippines (and in some Asian and US cities), Ingrid and Reynaldo have become veritable music missionaries, particularly in the hinterlands, while mastering the art of duo-playing, and its required interaction of the closest kind. Each pianist conveyed the finest nuances, but as previously implied, Ingrid had the more challenging passages.
Exquisite melodic themes glowingly surfaced in two of the Variations. Concerto No. 2, deservedly the best-known and loved of Rachmaninoffs concertos, was premiered on Nov. 9, 1901, with the composer himself as soloist of the Moscow Philharmonic.
Doubtless, he had shaped the concerto to suit his own tremendous power and awesome pianistic skill, and though one might presume Ingrid did not match these, she was far from wanting in either. I was amazed at her immense increase of power since I last heard her, her chordal passages sounding almost like those of a male pianist. Indeed, her sparkling brio awed the listener.
Ingrids power was again notable in the descriptive Mayon Fantasy which depicted the volcanos terrifying eruption, and the calm, tranquil, idyllic scene before and after it, the languid sections being charming arrangements of native folk themes. Folk songs likewise made up Souvenir which Reynaldo rendered with clarity, precision and artistic sensitivity.
An informal potpourri ensued after the lustily applauded concert proper. Tenor Frankie Aseniero, fresh from a highly successful European tour, sang light classics preceded by Jonathan Coo, accomplished pianist turned aspiring tenor. The versatile international concertist Raul Sunico rendered E. Cuencos Bato sa Buhangin, Feeling and the song which begins with the words "I want to give" as masterfully as he had played Rachmaninoffs four concertos in a single evening last 2003.
Mrs. Marcos, an avid aficionada, begged off from singing despite insistent requests, owing to a sore throat.