Simaku Wigmore Hall World Premiere

"Thomas Simaku is one of the most distinctive voices in British music today" – Jim Samson.

Part of a compelling programme by the acclaimed British pianist Danny Driver, including ‘sublime works’ by Chopin and Ligeti’s ‘complex creation of 1951-3’, the world premiere of Catena IV for piano by Thomas Simaku took place in London at a packed hall of Wigmore Hall on 2 January 2025. British musicologist Jim Samson – a leading authority on the music of Chopin, and author of several books – wrote, in his programme note: “Born in Albania, but granted British citizenship in 2000, Thomas Simaku is one of the most distinctive voices in British music today. Catena IV, given its world premiere in this concert, is the fourth work of his Catena Cycle for solo piano. The composer stresses that, despite its nine self-contained sections and four interludes, it was conceived as a single movement, a linked chain of events rather than episodic form. Our programming here is strategic, given that its fourth section is a ‘Hommage à Chopin’ (built on the exact notes of the opening of First Ballade) and its fifth section a ‘Hommage à Ligeti’ (a re-working of Ligeti’s signature lamento motif). Fittingly, the eighth is titled ‘Ligeti meets Chopin’. Here the Chopin quotation is overlaid by different manifestations of the lamento motif, and at registral extremes.”

As the composer put it, “With its array of colours across the keyboard, even going inside the piano lid to capture that metallic quality of the strings; and with its range of dynamics stretching from a stutter to a roar of sound, I could not have imagined a more fitting hall for this work that lasts about 20 minutes, than the Wigmore Hall. This was a memorable evening! Danny put his heart into it, and is going to do it again – the best compliment a composer could get!”