With the loss of its original conductor,
Emmanuel Krivine, and then its scheduled soloist, Evgeny Kissin, it
is a miracle this concert wasn’t cancelled outright. But miracles do
happen in the oddest of orchestral circumstances and the result of placing
two of the youngest of new Russian musicians against each other in Prokofiev’s
dazzling second piano concerto, with this ever-adaptable orchestra,
proved somewhat inspired.
Mr Kissin’s reason for withdrawing
was explained curtly by the Philharmonia in the programme notes, although
a photocopied handwritten letter from him with my tickets elaborated
slightly by explaining he couldn’t ‘play such a difficult concerto for
such a knowledgeable and demanding audience…without a thorough preparation
with a conductor I had had the opportunity to collaborate with before’.
A quick call to the Philharmonia press office confirmed that neither
Melnikov nor Sokhiev had ever collaborated together, on this concerto
or any other. It is a bluff which, I’m afraid, has left Mr Kissin severely
wrong footed.
Alexander Melnikov, whom Wigmore regulars will remember for a dazzling
Stravinsky Petrushka last July, is certainly one of the most promising
pianists of his generation. I wrote back in July:
Alexander
Melnikov gave a dazzling performance
of three scenes from Petrushka. Melnikov is a virtuoso in the
truest sense of the word, with a technique that recalls Cziffra, but
he also possesses, like Trpceski, an absolute sense of keyboard control.
If at times he over-projected he masterminded a performance that had
huge dynamic range. This performance spiralled like a tornado, but,
with some of the cleanest articulation imaginable, he never let the
virtuosity overwhelm the balance of the work. Glissandi were thrillingly
done, whilst his pedalling melted the vast bass-line chords with bell-like
clarity.
This performance of Prokofiev’s
Second displayed similar virtues: pin point dynamics, glittering keyboard
control, tonal warmth and an innate understanding for the work’s conflicting
emotions. At moments during the Intermezzo soloist and conductor
imbued this concerto with a Rachmaninovian sweep combined with a brittle,
disjointed harmony which pointed out the grotesque inferences in the
movement almost ideally. There were abundant delicacies in Melnikov’s
handling of both outer movements, allied with an astringency of tone
and subtle pedalling. The monumental first movement cadenza was shaped
cataclysmically, but with left hand and right hand also achieving a
wealth of colour it was also a performance which melded poetry and spikiness
in equal measure. Sokhiev and the Philharmonia provided admirable support
for their young soloist.
Tugan Sokhiev made his debut with this orchestra at the Three Choirs
Festival in August and already there is a blossoming relationship between
the two. The opening overture, to Ruslan and Ludmilla, had all
the panache one could have asked for: feverish articulation in the strings
went hand-in-hand with a dramatic sense of colour and lyricism. He followed
this with a performance of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition
which, above all, showed what control this young conductor has over
an orchestra.
Ravel’s orchestration drips with
so many ravishing timbres and shades that no one performance can possibly
hope to aspire to them all. Sokhiev’s did, more than most, helped partly
by the dark-grained playing of the Philharmonia strings who, in tableaux
like ‘Goldenberg and Schmuyle’ and ‘Catacombs’, produced a sonorous,
misty depth of tone which proved highly atmospheric. Best of all was
a shattering ‘Baba-Yaga’ projected at high velocity, the Philharmonia’s
articulation awe-inspiring. If at times Sokhiev achieved a counter-balance
of woodwind and brass of almost inflammatory dynamism this seemed less
of a problem when the string playing, notably of double basses stretched
out at the back of the stage, seemed imbued with such fervent sonority.
As an encore, Sokhiev gave us a
performance of the ‘Pas-de-Deux’ from Swan Lake. It was little
short of incredible – quite superlatively played – drawing to a close
a memorable concert.
Marc Bridle