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Classical: PROM 18: BOURNEMOUTH SO / ALSOP PROM 19: BBC PO / SINAISK

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  • Classical: PROM 18: BOURNEMOUTH SO / ALSOP PROM 19: BBC PO / SINAISK

    Classical: PROM 18: BOURNEMOUTH SO / ALSOP PROM 19: BBC PO / SINAISKY
    Royal Albert Hall LONDON HH/HHH

    The Independent - United Kingdom; Aug 02, 2005

    Edward Seckerson


    If Madame Mao had played the violin, John Corigliano's Violin
    Concerto 'The Red Violin' would have been to her taste. The former
    Shanghai film actress liked steamy melodrama. Still, she could be
    found in more familiar surroundings at the start of Prom 18. John
    Adams' 'foxtrot for orchestra', The Chairman Dances, chugged its way
    into the hall, dragging with it memories of his operatic masterpiece
    Nixon in China.

    Alas, 'dragging' might best describe the effect of Marin Alsop's
    effortful reading of this glitzy curtain-raiser. This is a sleeker,
    far more audacious piece than he had us believe. This is Madame Mao
    on Madison Avenue, all shantung silk and vampish impudence. It's her
    cultural revolution.

    But Alsop was way too circumspect. The band sounded ungainly, the
    shimmying string departures carried little insouciance, the rhythms
    didn't tantalise. Even those itchy final moments in the percussion
    failed to raise a smile.

    But, as the warm-up for Corigliano's overheated concerto, it was a
    nice idea. Corigliano deserved his Oscar for Franois Girard's The Red
    Violin. He wields a mean orchestra, and delights in colouristic drama
    " emotive contrasts, freakish exclamations, grandiloquent climaxes.
    The storyboard is there in the music.

    Joshua Bell carried the work's spirit through the time and space of
    three centuries, indulging its flights of fancy, weathering its
    pyrotechnical storms. He was amazing. Corigliano acted out every
    measure from his seat in the stalls. But, for all that, the result
    struck me more forcefully than ever as all surface and no soul.

    Unfortunate, perhaps, that the great Shostakovich First Violin
    Concerto " given the next night by the BBC Philharmonic under Vassily
    Sinaisky " is everything the Corigliano aspired to be, and more. The
    soloist " the hugely promising 20-year-old Armenian, Sergey
    Khachatryan " impressed with his modesty and emotional restraint. His
    soulful fragility was as beautiful as it was moving. The sound is as
    yet small, and he may in time take the work's wilder extremes closer
    to the wire. The great transitional cadenza from slow movement to
    finale, from resignation to defiance, must at least convey a sense of
    the individual overwhelmed by inexorable force. Khachatryan really
    can play this concerto. One day it will play him.

    The Proms can be heard at www.bbc.co.uk/proms
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