Reviews
I was particularly enchanted by her choice of the set of five pieces by Suk, Spring, Op 22a, and Janacek’s In the Mist. The latter are among the most adventurous in the whole literature, and still sound, nearly 100 years later, extraordinarily striking and original; Valesova dramatised their spare, stark beauty in playing that was utterly idiomatic and authoritative.
The Dominion Post, Wellington, New Zealand.
But, actually, the greatest sense of dramatic contrast and the most consistently
resourceful shaping of lyrical line was not to be found in singing.
The delight of the evening was the always responsive, imaginative and
finely polished piano-playing of Valešová.
Irish Times, 7 March 2008
Her playing was pure, intimate and sublime.
Shaun Ward, Hereford Times
Lada Valesova, one of the most gifted of all accompanists currently before the public.
Robert Matthew-Walker, Musical Opinion, May 2007
Miss Valesova was fully equal to the demands of performing works in such differing styles and the second half of the programme in which she performed Schubert’s complex Wanderer Fantasia was breathtaking.
Dumfries&Galloway Standard.
Wanderer Fantasia – a targeting work, which even Schubert himself could not play. Lada performed it with gargantuan sonic splurges with a towering integrity and I sensed an ever-deepening response to Schubert’s shattering sadness, which in Lada’s hands, never sounded self-indulgent or congested. Her playing, exuberant and spell bound by sheer panache captured the energy and lyricism of the work, culminating in furious finale. This was a marvel of sonic and technical brilliance.
Vanda Prochazka, critic for the Czech music magazine Harmonie.
Review of “ In Search of Mozart” documentary
The richest experiences in the documentary came from the brief, but illuminating analysis of some of the works, particularly those of Lada Valešová. This was a daring exercise by Phil Grabsky, as any in depth discussion of a single melody or phrase is in danger of becoming too abstract, finely detailed and loosing the audience’s attention.
The Oxonian Review of Books, Spring 2006