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SEEN AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Musorgsky,
Dvorak,
Tchaikovsky: Sebastian
Klinger (cello), Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Thomas
Sanderling (conductor), Herkulessaal, Munich 20.2.2009 (JFL)
Musorgsky, Night on Bald Mountain
Dvořák,
Cello Concerto in b-minor op.104
Tchaikovsky, Symphony Nr.1 ”Winter Dreams”
Kurt Sanderling was too great a conductor for Michael Sanderling
(b.1967) not to be introduced as his youngest son. He will know to
take it as a compliment of his father’s achievements, not
belittlement of his own—very considerable—skills. Thursday and
Friday, February 19th and 20th, he had the
opportunity to display those skills after jumping in to replace
Riccardo Muti (down with a cold) in two concerts with the BRSO on
just a few hours notice. Shuttled down from Berlin Monday night to
take over rehearsals Tuesday morning, he was able to keep the first
half of the program with the popular Musorgsky “Night on Bald
Mountain” and Dvořák’s Cello Concerto, replacing only the planned
Paul Hindemith Symphony in E-flat, a rarity, with Tchaikovsky’s
First Symphony. (Certainly, of all conductors to replace Muti,
Sanderling is the only to do Muti’s hair justice.)
In the Musorgksy, he ripped through the “Night on Bald Mountain” in
a manner more snappy and explosive than the BRSO tends to play under
the gentler hands of Mariss Jansons. If the last bit of precision,
here as in the other pieces, was lacking, it was made up for with a
palpable sense of merry exuberance.
Under most circumstances, a Dvořák Cello Concerto with the first
chair of the orchestra’s cello section would indicate stop-gap
programming—with predictably modest results. If the (planned)
conductorship of Muti did not already dispel any such thoughts, the
quality of young
Sebastian Klinger’s playing (of
which his Bach Suites, released last year, are proof enough)
would. Part of the BRSO’s excellence stems from the individual
excellence of its players and certainly most first chairs
could be respectable soloists in their own right.
That said, the actual performance was a disappointment. There was
beauty and more than ample facility, but the sound of Klinger’s
cello remained contained instead of soaring throughout the
Herkulessaal, as if his instrument had caught the cold, too. The
interpretations sounded a touch labored and shy. Perhaps the largest
deficit in Klinger’s performance was the lack of soloist-attitude.
With terrific contributions from the flute (Henrik Wiese, loud but
beautiful) and the first violin (Andreas Röhn, who made his brief
solo part in the last movement stand out with echt-Viennese
intensity), the concerto got better as it went on, with Klinger
finally hitting his stride in the last five minutes.
Tchaikovsky’s “Winter Dreams” Symphony—appropriate as Munich is
covered by a thick blanket of snow—was driven at a clip that
prohibited a sugar rush and showed it for the lovely work—full of
touches of his ballet music in the first movement—that it is.
Resigned to lurking in the shadow of its bigger siblings, Symphonies
Four, Five, and Six, the work will surprise upon every hearing with
its quality. The BRSO must have taken to it like fish to water under
Sanderling’s guidance: romantic fervor was plentiful, chocolaty hues
from the strings in the fourth movement, outstandingly executed
dynamic nuances throughout, silences that were meaningful, not
portentous, and a rocking, swaying finale made a case for Michael
Sanderling to be every bit as good a conductor as he was and is a
cellist. I should be surprised if the music world was not to hear
and see more of him, soon.
The BRSO will play three concerts at Carnegie Hall on March
13th,
14th, and
15th. They will bring the commissioned
Shchedrin and
Widmann pieces, Brahms and Beethoven symphonies, and Mozart and
Prokofiev concertos with Emanuel Ax and Julia Fischer.
Jens F.
Laurson