Sometimes unexpected instruments are given unexpectedly exalted moments,
such as last night in György Ligeti’s Violin Concerto, dazzlingly
executed by Tasmin Little, with Simon Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic
in coolly beautiful form. As some of the musicians put down their flutes,
piccolos, and oboes, suddenly a shrill chorus of ocarinas leaped up,
only adding to the otherworldliness of Ligeti’s astonishing timbres.
Little, who looked sensational in a sleek, shimmering, dare I say, Ligeti-esque
dress in green and magenta, brought down the house with her confident,
lyrical and entirely imaginative reading.
By turns brittle, mournful, solemn, and playful,
the piece has unusually extreme dynamics ranging from pppppp
to a whopping ffffffff (for the xylophone). Further, the composer
asks the performer to write his or her own cadenza that appears at the
end. (The one created by Saschko Gawriloff, the work’s original performer,
is supplied in the score.) In this instance, Little chose to duplicate
the sound of the ocarinas and other textural elements, and resurrected
fragments from each of the work’s previous sections. Her instincts only
confirmed her triumph, as did the ovations at the end, and further,
it is not often that a packed Carnegie Hall is so effusive for a relatively
recent piece (it was completed in 1990, and revised in 1992.)
On an unusual technical note, instead of a conventional
paper score, Little used a computer screen, designed by her husband
for her London Proms
appearance, that electronically scrolled through the music. Using two
small footpads taped to Carnegie’s stage, she was able to tap her foot
slightly to advance to the next passage. (Interesting how just adding
a bit of advanced technology can increase the temperature of the evening.)
The Bartok masterpiece that began the evening
was also terrific, with the opening at a haunting whisper, and biting
renderings of the strident, clashing chords in the faster movements.
I would have felt perfectly satisfied after this performance alone.
Here and all night, the Berlin players seemed prepared for anything.
As the cheering broke out as the piece ended, Rattle strode to the back
of the orchestra to congratulate the orchestra’s keyboard player and
percussion players.
A confession: I am not in the camp of those who
abide by conventional wisdom that the Berlin orchestra is "the
best in the world," a comment overheard several times during the
evening. Certainly they are one of them, but having just heard
the Los Angeles Philharmonic play an almost shockingly immaculate Mahler
Second Symphony, not to mention a recent and blazing Mahler
Fifth by Maazel and the New York Philharmonic, there is plenty
of virtuosity to go around. Yes, the Berlin ensemble still has a distinctive
sound, but then so do many other great orchestras in Cleveland, Amsterdam,
London, Philadelphia, Vienna, and elsewhere. Any of them, on a particular
night, can sound like the best group on the planet, with the right combination
of conductor, repertoire, and all the zillions of little unquantifiable
things like weather, emotions, and what everyone onstage ate before
the performance. But back to Berlin: what was remarkable last night
was that all three pieces were not only beautifully executed, but played
with a distinct character, as if imagined by three entirely different
ensembles. This is indeed one criterion of a great orchestra.
I must quit saying to friends that "I don’t
really care for the Beethoven Sixth." True, when Claudio
Abbado brought it here in the fall of 2001, I was deeply disappointed
because his planned Mahler Seventh was scrapped after September
11, presumably because the Mahler was deemed too edgy and emotionally
uncomfortable. For the record, I disagree; the fierce, complex, ambiguous,
and ultimately elevating Seventh would have been a transcendent
experience for those of us in the city at that time. And further, having
heard Abbado’s recording of the piece done during the same year, we
were cheated out of a potentially spectacular concert. In any case,
the program was changed to Beethoven’s Fifth and Sixth
symphonies, and I had to admit that the evening was memorable.
But it seems unimaginable that any curmudgeon
could resist the magnificent playing and insightful phrasing that Rattle
offered last night. The Berlin players could probably perform this in
their sleep, but there was nothing perfunctory in this reading. I can’t
imagine anyone painting the rippling brook better than what I heard
from the orchestra’s woodwind section, and the storm sequence was positively
explosive. At the end, a woman next to me said, "Have you ever
heard anything this sublime?" Of course I had, but at the moment,
only Beethoven seemed to matter.
Bruce Hodges