Joining old hand Mika, and replacing nana-heartthrob Lang Lang, is the wildly overqualified Jon Batiste. The American musician has forged a career by working with the likes of Beyoncé, Lana del Rey and Stevie Wonder. He has won five Grammys and an Oscar. I hate to think what must have happened for him to find himself in such dire straits to have to take a job on The Piano. And while his energetic, irreverent presence proves something of a salve for the show’s prurient pomposity, he still doesn’t save it.
square TV REVIEWS The Piano is anodyne fluff that treats its viewers like idiots
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As for Keba, found as a baby on the street in Senegal before being adopted in France, he’s taught himself to play during a period of homelessness. Gilly, a Tarot card reader, uses music to overcome the hearing loss with which she was born. Septuagenarian John turns up in a sparkly jacket – “Come on, sequin daddy!” squeals Batiste – and plays some old-timey sing-along numbers, despite his battle with Parkinson’s.
“If you don’t know the story and the context, it might not be as powerful,” he says – which rather begs the question, if someone’s story doesn’t matter why make such a big deal out of them? With all due respect to The Piano’s musicians, they have not been selected on merit alone – which is fine, TV hinges on narrative interest – but being coy about that makes it even more distasteful.
In the third season of ‘The Piano’, the hunt for the country’s best amateur pianist begins in London’s Liverpool Street station (Photo: Channel 4 / Nic Serpell Rand
Even amid my grouchiness, I have to admit he is right. While it doesn’t entirely escape the show’s identity-drive, the way Mia’s story is presented is probably the least reductive. “[The song] reflects so many of the wonderful and beautiful things that people from across the African diaspora have been a part of,” she says, of “Troubled Water” by Margaret Bonds, who has been a precious discovery for Mia given the dearth of Black female role models in classical music. Certainly, her rendition is special enough to translate through the screen.
Burn it to the ground, I say, and send Batiste and all the performers off to a studio to make some real music.
‘The Piano’ continues next Sunday at 9pm on Channel 4
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