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`Till Eulenspiegels' Highlights London Philharmonic Concert

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  • `Till Eulenspiegels' Highlights London Philharmonic Concert

    Hartford Courant
    March 25 2006

    `Till Eulenspiegels' Highlights London Philharmonic Concert
    March 25, 2006

    By MATTHEW ERIKSON, Courant Staff Writer Disappointing many music
    lovers, the 78-year-old maestro Kurt Masur canceled his scheduled
    American tour with the London Philharmonic due to illness.

    Yet to the credit of the orchestra's organization (and some lucky
    breaks in conductors' schedules), the LPO located some stellar talent
    to take Masur's place. The Finnish conductor Osmo Vänskä, music
    director of the Minnesota Orchestra, led for the California part of
    the tour. Neeme Järvi and Yan Pascal Tortelier substituted for many
    of the orchestra's Northeast engagements.

    Thursday evening at the University of Connecticut's Jorgensen Center
    for the Performing Arts, the spotlight was on Tortelier. The French
    conductor is part of a troika of conductors announced in 2004 to
    succeed Mariss Jansons at the Pittsburgh Symphony. Tortelier's
    strength is considered to be the French repertoire, but in a
    tell-tale sign of his versatility, he left Masur's original program
    alone. What's more, his incisive conducting made a strongly positive
    impression.

    Still, Thursday's program was oddly lopsided, particularly as a
    showcase for one of Europe's finest orchestras. Youthful works by
    Britten and Mozart occupied the evening's first half. It was mere
    appetizer. The musical meat came after intermission with
    Khachaturian's Violin Concerto and Strauss' ebullient tone poem "Till
    Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche." Youth remained the concert's theme.

    Twenty-year-old Armenian violinist Sergey Khachatryan created
    something of a sensation in the concerto. The soloist's white-hot
    virtuosity turned the audience on to a work they likely hadn't heard
    before. The composer Khachaturian may have lacked the biting wit of
    his contemporaries Shostakovich and Prokofiev, but his 1940 concerto,
    written for the great violinist David Oistrakh, has an emotional
    immediacy and makes appealing use of folk-like melodies and colorful
    orchestration. In one delicious passage in the opening movement,
    Khachatryan's violin melted seamlessly into a duet with clarinet. The
    concerto's slow movement had the seducing contours of an Erik Satie
    Gymnopédie. The propulsive finale provided ample opportunity for the
    violinist to shine. Khachatryan's future is surely one to follow.

    Elsewhere, the orchestra's tonal brilliance projected beautifully in
    the dull acoustics of Jorgensen. The first half of the program,
    mainly featuring the London Phil's strings, performed Britten's
    "Simple Symphony" and Mozart's Symphony No. 29 with X-ray
    transparency. Tortelier sculpted phrases with élan and finely
    calibrated dynamics.

    The evening's singular highlight came in the Strauss. With the
    orchestra fully represented on stage, Tortelier milked every comic
    gag in the tone poem, which is based on the heroic trickster of
    German folklore. Aside from some overeager brass, the musicians
    played it to perfection.
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