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Pianist brings Field and Beethoven to China

Returning to the stage in Beijing, Alice Sara Ott highlights little-known nocturnes while linking them with master composer's sonatas, Chen Nan reports.

By Chen Nan | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2026-04-09 08:33

Pianist Alice Sara Ott returns to China for a tour spanning Guangzhou, Shanghai and Beijing. CHINA DAILY

Alice Sara Ott closed her eyes for a moment before touching the piano keys, feeling the quiet energy of the Forbidden City Concert Hall around her. The German-Japanese pianist was back in Beijing on March 29 to share the music that had captivated her during the long months of lockdown in the days of the COVID-19 pandemic: the luminous nocturnes of John Field and the powerful, architectural landscapes of Beethoven. Each note was a personal story, each pause a space for connection with an audience that had waited as long as she had.

"I first discovered John Field during the pandemic," Ott told China Daily the day after the concert in Beijing. "His music wasn't something I studied as a child. Hearing those nocturnes for the first time was strange — nostalgic yet completely new. I became obsessed and wanted to share them with audiences."

Pairing Field with Beethoven felt natural."They lived at the same time, might have had the same teacher, and I found similarities in their works. Beethoven is a towering figure today; Field is lesser known. Bringing them together allows listeners to hear those connections and contrasts," she says.

A year ago, Ott released her Deutsche Grammophon recording of Field's complete, rarely performed nocturnes — 18 in total. While this genre is often associated with Chopin, it was pioneered, if not invented, by the lesser-known Field. Later, Ott undertook a 17-city European tour of Field's nocturnes with sonatas by Beethoven.

The album, John Field: Complete Nocturnes, has been named Apple Classical's most-streamed classical album of 2025, marking a major milestone for the pianist.

Recording an album of Field's music was about preservation but also invitation. "I hope young pianists will discover Field and include him in their programs. His nocturnes may seem simple, but the deeper you go, the more layers you uncover. Some pieces even became favorites over time, surprising me," the pianist says.

Ott's approach to interpretation blends rigorous study with intuition.

"I start with the score — structure, harmonies, dynamics — but performance is also personal. Context matters. Playing a Field nocturne on its own is different from pairing it with Beethoven. And live performance adds another layer: every instrument, hall and audience changes everything," she says.

The pianist performs to a full house in Guangzhou on March 27. CHINA DAILY

The audience itself, she adds, is an essential part of the music.

"Music is a shared experience. Silence, pauses, the resonance in the room — they're as important as the notes. In a live concert, we endure a moment together, fully aware of it. That makes it powerful and valuable in today's busy world."

With her tours in China over the past decade, Ott has built up a large fan base in the country and her recent tour, which took her to Guangzhou, Guangdong province, Shanghai and Beijing, excited her fans.

"Choosing to champion John Field is admirable in itself. The true inventor of the nocturne remains little known today, yet Alice has discovered the unique magic in his music. Such dedication to a lesser-known composer is rare among the younger generation of leading pianists," reviewed an audience member on the social media platform Xiaohongshu (RedNote).

"Alice's interpretation of Field's nocturnes is a refuge for the anxious mind — each note gentle and calm, each arrangement a thoughtful conversation between composers across time," wrote another fan.

"China has a very devoted, very young audience. People are very knowledgeable and passionate about music, which I think is great. And I love that so many young kids here play an instrument," Ott says.

"What I also love to see is that people acknowledge the work I put into curating a program. When they recognize all the work I have done to create a certain project, I appreciate it a lot because I put so much work and effort into my programs," says Ott, who last performed in China in 2019, when she used a video installation as part of her concept.

"As a woman, I am used to always being commented on for how I look. Objectification happens very often because of someone's appearance. But I am a real person, and I care so much about what I do. So if people actually recognize the artist in me, that's the biggest compliment I can get, and I can see that change slowly through my programs," she adds.

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