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Performing Arts: London Philharmonic Orchestra

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  • Performing Arts: London Philharmonic Orchestra

    PERFORMING ARTS: LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

    Washington Post
    March 29 2006

    Intangible qualities like chemistry and daring made the difference
    in the London Philharmonic Orchestra's impressive Monday evening
    performance at the Kennedy Center. The orchestra arrived at the tail
    end of a long American tour that saw its chief conductor, Kurt Masur,
    drop out early due to illness. A busy month and no fewer than four
    guest conductors later, one would have a predicted a solid if somewhat
    bedraggled run-through with little of the luminous sweep and detail
    in Eastern European music that actually came about.

    The concert opener, Benjamin Britten's "Simple" Symphony, Op. 4,
    showed the nice connection between the orchestra and Yan Pascal
    Tortelier, an experienced conductor of confident technique and keen
    imagination. This lucid, well-appointed reading pointed to such
    diverse influences as Bach and Sibelius.

    Yet it was the gifted Armenian violinist Sergey Khachatryan who
    sparked the bristling energy in Aram Khachaturian's Violin Concerto
    in D Minor. The 20-year-old virtuoso had an idiomatic feel for the
    work's ebb and flow, launching off a brilliant range of flourishes
    and accents in a reading that magnified the music's foreboding
    contrasts. Khachatryan gave a beautiful encore of the first movement
    from Bach's Violin Partita No. 1 in B Minor, BWV 1002.

    Multihued colors, churning rhythms and passionate melodies similarly
    distinguished Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, Op. 64.

    Tortelier balanced warm blending and clean articulation by turns,
    bringing out the music's glowing swells, tender lines and ultimately
    triumphant mood.

    The evening was a presentation of the Washington Performing Arts
    Society.
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