Conducting
studies at Boston Symphony's Tanglewood Music Centre brought David Zinman
to the attention of Pierre Monteux, who guided his conducting career
and gave him his first conducting opportunities with the LSO; I found
Zinman’s intricate and impassioned reading of Ravel’s Daphnis &
Chloe even greater than Monteux’s celebrated 1959 LSO Decca account.
Charles Ive’s Three Places
in New England is a rarely played work and it was given a highly
concentrated and sensitive reading. The opening section, The St.Guadens’
in Boston Common, had an extraordinary eerie tone set by the LSO’s
ghostly strings which created a sense of distance and wilderness. A
camp, carnivalesque mood came through in the second movement: Putnam’s
camp, Redding, Connecticut, with Zinman making the brass and percussion
sound like a grotesque parody of a brass band (very much in the manner
Mahler had done). As the brass reached a climax of white noise, accompanied
by a superbly played nailing timpani roll, the music abruptly melted
back into a calm serenity. In the concluding movement, The Housatonic
at Stockbridge, the LSO strings played with a hushed intensity,
producing a silky sheen of sound evoking the mist over the river bed
which the composer recalled when writing this piece. Throughout this
evocative performance Zinman conducted with exacting economy securing
superb playing from the LSO.
George Benjamin stated in the
programme notes on his Sudden Time (1989-1993): "…I wanted
the music to flow with considerable agility, the material evolving across
the orchestra, sometimes in several different directions simultaneously.
The resulting structure oscillates between focused, pulsed simplicity
and whirlpools of complex polyrhythm An organic sense of continuity
between these extremes is made possible by the fact that all material,
however plain or elaborate, is based on a few musical ells of great
simplicity." A composer’s intentions in theory do not necessarily
materialise in practice. This was music of fractured fragments and ruptures,
which negated continuity and organic growth, with sounds splitting off
and suddenly dissolving. It seemed as if Benjamin had composed in contemporary
cliches so predictable were the noises and he seemed to be trying to
achieve a kind of ethnic radicalism with his use of a politically correct,
‘primitive’ percussion. In his notes, the composer also writes on why
he admires the other two compositions on the programme, both of which
use a very sparing battery of percussion: less is often more. The reality,
however, was that Benjamin’s over-use of percussion merely succeeded
in negating the intensity he wished to create.
The concert closed with a paradigm
performance of Ravel’s Daphnis & Chloe. The conductor had
obviously thoroughly thought out this multi-layered score and knew exactly
when to hold back or unleash his forces. The opening Introduction
had the right degree of subdued mystery as we encountered distant sounds
slowly coming into being. The danse generale was conducted with
the essential lilt without the percussion drowning out the strings.
Danse grotesque de dorcon was perfectly paced, with the conductor
perfectly articulating the lithe, jagged and thrusting dance rhythms;
while the Danse de lyceion had some exquisite woodwind solos
perfectly modulated.
The most evocative moment of this
performance was the Danse lente et mysterieuse with the
LSO producing some of the most subtle and sublime playing I have ever
heard from any orchestra. Zinman coaxed the strings to play with an
extremely subtle shimmering sound as if being played from afar, accompanied
by the wind machine which, for once, was not over-done but blended in
beautifully. In the Deuxieme partie: Introduction the LSO Chorus
were on quite outstanding form, producing a radiant glow gradually building
up in force and intensity until the full orchestra exploded with a torrent
of sound with the savage Danse guerriere where Zinman initiated
a throbbing pulse turning up the tension and making the music more manic
and warlike. Here the brass and woodwind had real cutting edge, while
the men from the LSO Chorus produced a menacing stabbing sound suddenly
ending in abrupt silence: I have never before heard this done with such
intensity and attack.
The Pantomime of part three
had some rhythmically buoyant and voluptuous flute solos floating on
a soft bed of strings, taking us into the closing Danse generale
with Zinman perfectly building up the energy to end in an overwhelming
explosion of sound. Every member of the LSO was on immaculate form,
with some notably subtle harp and timpani playing. Throughout, the LSO
Chorus were simply flawless and sang with a haunting and hypnotic quality.
This outstanding account of Daphnis & Chloe was an illuminating
and intoxicating experience.
Alex
Russell