Yunchan Lim Returns to Domestic Recitals After Two Years
From Schubert to Scriabin: Total Immersion
Seong‑Jin Cho Performs with the Munich Philharmonic Through the 9th
Displays Jaw‑Dropping Virtuosity in Prokofiev and Beyond
Young pianists Seong‑Jin Cho and Yunchan Lim stirred the classical scene with near‑simultaneous performances that captured the public’s attention. The overlap in their domestic schedules only heightened interest: on the 6th, Cho played at Seoul Arts Center’s Concert Hall while Lim took the stage at Lotte Concert Hall, each presenting a distinct artistic voice.
Back on a Korean recital tour after two years, Lim paired Schubert and Scriabin sonatas in a program that felt daringly personal. He said he had “passed through a long silence and hesitation and finally reached music that truly lives deep inside,” explaining that he shed compulsions, inertia and habit to present works he has loved for years and never wanted to abandon.
In Lotte Concert Hall — a venue known for long reverberation and acoustic variation by seat — Lim nonetheless filled the hall with a concentrated, unmistakably individual sound. He opened the first half with Schubert’s Sonata No. 17, the “Gastein,” completed in 1825 in the Austrian spa town of Gastein, three years before the composer’s death. The sonata balances Alpine brightness and clarity with Schubert’s trademark melancholy and solitude. Lim reshaped familiar Schubert in his own musical language, resisting the urge to overstate personality and instead revealing the work’s essence through restraint.
In the second half he revealed a radically different side with Scriabin. Sonata No. 2, which had made a global impression when Lim played it at the 2022 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, opened a sequence that included Sonatas Nos. 3 and 4. Presented back‑to‑back, the eight movements were woven into a single, sweeping arc.
Sonata No. 2 evoked a moonlit sea thrown into storm; No. 3 traced the soul’s struggle amid pain and anxiety; and No. 4 closed with a mysterious climax that seemed to propel the music toward the cosmos.
In his Scriabin playing Lim used his entire body, not just his fingertips. Alongside immaculate technique, he unleashed strains of unease, ambiguity and frenzied energy that at times unsettled the audience’s sense of time and space.
Lim continues his tour on the 8th at Daegu Concerthouse, the 9th at Busan Concert Hall, the 10th at Tongyeong International Music Hall, the 12th at Seoul Arts Center, and the 13th at Incheon Art Center.
Seong‑Jin Cho, meanwhile, offered another facet of his artistry in concerts with the Munich Philharmonic, combining peak technique with thoughtful interpretation.
On the 5th, Cho’s reading of Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 1 showcased a refined musical sensibility: clear, dynamic flow and a solid, polished touch. His collaboration with the much‑noticed young conductor Lahav Shani was especially compelling.
The classical restraint of Beethoven’s early concertos, however, left some of Cho’s force and depth just under the surface — a shortfall he more than remedied on the 6th with a blistering account of Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 2.
Widely regarded as a masterpiece of 20th‑century concerto writing, Prokofiev’s work demands sharp dissonance, radical formal thinking and almost demonic virtuosity. Cho added relentless drive to his typically clean, transparent tone. At the climaxes he practically rose from his seat, throwing his weight into the keys, yet he never lost balance or control amid the tumult.
Critic Juho Song lauded the performance as “a stage that revealed a new facet of Seong‑Jin Cho.” He called the Second Concerto a “demonic piece” that’s nearly impossible to play in a sober, detached way, and praised Cho for mastering and channeling the music’s madness rather than being overwhelmed by it.
Cho will alternate the two programs with the Munich Philharmonic on the 8th at Incheon Art Center and the 9th at Lotte Concert Hall.

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