How Prepared Artists Seize Their Moment: The ‘Dae-ta’ Phenomenon in Classical Music
Daniel Kim Views
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When is baseball at its most electrifying? For many fans it’s the bottom of the ninth—two outs, bases loaded—when a pinch-hitter steps in and clears the fence with a game-winning home run.
Those sudden reversals aren’t limited to the diamond. In classical music, too, a “pinch-hit” mythology persists: artists who step in for an ailing or absent colleague and, in doing so, seize the spotlight.
The most emblematic case is Leonard Bernstein. In 1943 the then-25-year-old assistant conductor learned that Bruno Walter had fallen ill the morning of a concert. With no time to rehearse, Bernstein borrowed a suit, took the podium of the New York Philharmonic and led a performance broadcast live on CBS. He navigated the demanding score with authority and became a star almost overnight. His career had begun with a single, dramatic substitution.
South Korean pianist Seong-Jin Cho is another notable example. In 2017, ahead of the Berlin Philharmonic’s Asia tour, Lang Lang withdrew with a left-arm injury. Cho, already known for his Chopin Competition victory, was called in on short notice. He learned Ravel’s piano concerto quickly and delivered commanding performances across the Berlin–Seoul tour, using the opportunity to cement his international standing.
More recently, in 2023, pianist Mao Fujita stepped in at Carnegie Hall when Mitsuko Uchida withdrew for health reasons. With just 24 hours to prepare, Fujita’s fresh, individual take on Mozart earned a standing ovation—another reminder that opportunity favors those who are ready.
A similar moment unfolded last week at a Seoul Philharmonic concert. Alice Sara Ott, scheduled to appear, suffered a hand problem and required emergency surgery. Kim Sun-wook, already conducting the program, sat at the piano and assumed both roles.
As a “playing conductor,” he delivered Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4 with clarity and conviction, simultaneously fulfilling the duties of soloist and conductor. That demanding double role wasn’t an accident; it was the culmination of years spent honing his craft as both pianist and conductor. The audience greeted the performance not with regret over the original soloist but with delighted applause for an unexpected triumph.
These narratives are often labeled “once-in-a-lifetime” chances. Opportunities may pass everyone by, but only those who have prepared can seize them and turn them into decisive moments.
A pinch-hitter takes thousands of warmup swings on the bench; an aspiring musician leaves the practice-room light on until the score shows wear. They do it for one reason: to be ready, unashamed, when that unpredictable star turn arrives.
What looks like luck on the surface is, in truth, the product of steady discipline. Watching a substitute seize a rare chance and write a success story is one of the great pleasures of life.
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