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Review: Jean-Yves Thibaudet And L.A. Philharmonic At Hollywood Bowl

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  • Review: Jean-Yves Thibaudet And L.A. Philharmonic At Hollywood Bowl

    REVIEW: JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET AND L.A. PHILHARMONIC AT HOLLYWOOD BOWL
    By Josef Woodard, Special to The Times

    Los Angeles Times
    Aug 22 2008

    Khachaturian, long considered a lighter-weight participant among 20th
    century composers, may be ripe for reconsideration.

    Although Thursday night's Hollywood Bowl performance by the Los
    Angeles Philharmonic had a mostly Russian feeling, its program was
    more complicated than that.

    Sure, the pioneering Glinka and the reliable crowd-pleaser Tchaikovsky
    run down the middle of Russian musical culture, and the Hungarian
    Zoltan Kodaly qualifies as compatible kin from the former Eastern Bloc.

    But Aram Khachaturian, whose Piano Concerto was the concert's
    centerpiece, was both Moscow-trained and proudly from and of
    Armenia. And it was Khachaturian -- who worked in the shadows of
    Glinka, Armenian traditional music and, to a lesser extent, Stravinsky
    -- who dominated the concert.

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    www.arkivmusic.com/Handel Indeed, Khachaturian, long considered a
    lighter-weight participant among 20th century composers, may be ripe
    for reconsideration, or at least that was a notion strengthened by
    Thursday's controlled and passion-powered reading of the concerto by
    pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet.

    A three-movement piece written in 1936, the work is a solid example of
    the composer's personalized mix of blustery sentimentality, folkish
    colors and teasing Modernist spice. Thibaudet mastered the score
    handily, deftly working the extremes of flashy dynamism and feathery
    ruminations, which he somehow projected into the Bowl's expanse.

    Like Khachaturian, Kodaly has sometimes been cast as an also-ran among
    20th century masters, overshadowed by fellow Hungarian Bartok. His
    "Dances of Galanta," the concert's closer, suggests a softer-edged
    Bartok, its indigenous folk themes intact and plushly padded.

    Standard-brand orchestral taste treats, which can sound better
    when consumed in the Bowl's great outdoorsy setting, served as
    supportive pillars on the program. Glinka's "Russlan and Ludmilla"
    started things off with all the gleaming, boisterous energy expected
    of it. Tchaikovsky's "Romeo and Juliet," for its part, retained its
    charms and loveliness.

    On the podium, Lionel Bringuier, all of 21 and about to begin his
    second season as the Phil's assistant conductor, acquitted himself and
    marshaled the ensemble forces beautifully. It appears that this mighty
    orchestra -- on the verge of Venezuelan wunderkind Gustavo Dudamel's
    tenure at the helm -- is in the assured clutches of ultra-talented
    twentysomethings.
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