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  • Symphony Concert

    Cape Times - South Africa
    Aug 11 2004

    Symphony Concert

    By Deon Irish

    Thursday, August 5, City Hall; CPO conducted by Leslie B Dunner,
    soloists Suren Bagratuni, Beverley Chiat; Dvorak: Cello Concerto in B
    minor, Op 104; Mahler: Symphony No 4 in G major.

    Even the miserable winter conditions did not prevent a pleasantly
    full - even if not packed - house for a neatly balanced programme of
    symphonic masterpieces, sponsored by Cape Gate on the occasion of its
    75th anniversary.

    Dvorak's glorious concerto was written in the last months of his
    three-year stay in New York, a period which also produced the popular
    symphony From the New World to be featured in this week's concert.

    It is the work of a composer at the height of his creative powers
    and, more pertinently, self-confidence. In the case of the finale,
    for example, he was unmoved in withstanding the pressures of his
    technical adviser, the cellist Hans Wihan, and of his publisher,
    neither of whom cared for the relatively quiet concluding measures of
    the work.

    A concluding cadenza was suggested - even written out by Wihan - but
    the composer was adamant: "I will give you my work only if you
    promise not to allow anyone to make changes - friend Wihan not
    excepted..."

    Dvorak's judgment has stood the test of time and in this performance,
    the Armenian-born cellist, Suren Bagratuni, demonstrated just why the
    work retains its prime status in the cello repertoire.

    It does require a neat partnership between soloist and conductor for
    the orchestration, cunningly tailored to the soloist's needs, has
    nevertheless the potential to overwhelm. On this occasion, orchestral
    climaxes were repeatedly too brass-dominated in scale, resulting in a
    somewhat unbalanced overall architecture.

    The soloist displayed considerable artistry on his instrument, with
    an admirable purposefulness which ensured that the solo line remained
    consistently focused. Bowing was many-faceted and intonation secure.



    But the greater pleasure came from personal touches which, through
    subtle alterations of tempo and the infusion of a rhapsodic element,
    gave individual personality to a well-known score.

    Accompaniment featured many good things - including some fine horn
    solos and finely controlled soft trumpet chords - but there was some
    indifferent ensemble - not least in the final crescendo, which only
    just held together.

    The visiting American conductor, Leslie B Dunner, then took centre
    stage for the Mahler 4th Symphony and demonstrated a facility with
    the score which proved ingratiating. The work is Mahler's shortest
    and happiest symphony; and has as its genesis a rejected seventh
    movement for his already monumental third symphony!

    The movement was to be called What the Child tells me and, in this
    symphony, it becomes the final revelation of all that goes before, a
    song in which the soprano replicates the
    innocent joy of a child's vision of heaven, presenting an uncannily
    contemporary obsession with culinary ingredients.

    Beverley Chiat sang with musicality and a joyful intent, in most part
    capturing the composer's direction to replicate a childlike
    brilliance.

    This is a work in which the self-gnawing angst which beset the
    composer was, for a brief while, operating at only fractional
    strength.

    But the morbidities are there; the acerbic tunes and neurotic
    accompaniments abound and, even if it does culminate in a child-like
    vision, we are constrained to admit that it is a very odd child.

    Dunner led the orchestra in a generally assured and frequently
    insightful account of the score; but, such anguish as there was
    seemed (perhaps understandably) that of a rather different oppression
    from that understood by the composer. The same old story, but told
    with a somewhat different accent.
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