Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Philharmonia/Salonen At The Festival Hall

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Philharmonia/Salonen At The Festival Hall

    PHILHARMONIA/SALONEN AT THE FESTIVAL HALL
    Geoff Brown

    Times Online/uk
    June 15, 2010

    To close Esa-Pekka Salonen's London concerts with the Philharmonia
    Orchestra this season, what better than something fantastic? Or,
    indeed, Fantastique? The romantic bone-shaker and firecracker that
    is Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique receives many concert outings,
    but it takes a special performance these days to reignite the work's
    revolutionary fervour and make its sounds seem truly extraordinary,
    raw and new.

    This was such a special performance. As the opening movement lurched
    forward from listlessness to tenderness and rage, we felt ourselves
    right inside Berlioz's head, mad like him with unrequited passion for
    the actress Harriet Smithson. Yet for every autobiographical fantasy
    that followed, Salonen, wise man, never abandoned tight control of
    timbre and texture, or the timing needed for dramatic effects.

    In a symphony crowded with fortissimo blasts, decibels were still
    kept in store for the lethal, roof-lifting final pages. This was a
    Witches' Sabbath with real warts and teeth, and the sonic earthquake
    of Sensurround. The March to the Scaffold flayed the eardrums too. The
    Philharmonia gave us whipcrack precision and startling hues, from
    ghostly rasping strings to the rudest brass. Quieter drama wasn't
    forgotten in the slow-burning adagio, beautifully shaped, with aching
    solo winds, while the second movement's ball scene engagingly waltzed
    from light velvet strings towards the trumpet-topped bounce of a
    theatre orchestra. Magnificent phantasmagoria, this.

    It was such a contrast to the concert's first half, featuring Brahms's
    Violin Concerto, given an intensely focused rendering by the talented
    young Armenian, Sergey Khachatryan. No grandstanding tricks for him.

    Head down, Khachatryan just fiddled away, the music's servant,
    his fingers lyrical, his face tortured - never more so than in the
    anguished fragility of his Bach sarabande encore. Repeatedly in the
    Brahms he tapered phrases toward the most delicate of pianissimos.

    Admittedly, in the rondo finale Gypsy fire was a little subdued. But
    you can't have everything in life, and this concert already gave us
    more of everything than most.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X