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SEEN AND HEARD
UK CONCERT REVIEW
Knussen, Britten, Wigglesworth, and Johann Strauss: Britten Sinfonia, Jacqueline Shave (violin/director), Ryan Wigglesworth (conductor). West Road Concert Hall, Cambridge, 20.1.2009 (MB)
Knussen – Songs without
Voices: four pieces for eight instrumentalists, op.26 (1991-2)
Britten – Phantasy Quartet (1932)
Ryan Wigglesworth – Tenebrae (2008, British premiere)
Johann Strauss, arr. Schoenberg – Kaiserwalzer (1889, arr. 1925)
Jacqueline Shave (violin/director)
Miranda Dale (violin)
Martin Outram (viola)
Caroline Deamley (’cello)
Emer McDonough (flute)
Nicholas Daniel (oboe/English horn)
Joy Farrall (clarinet)
Stephen Bell (horn)
John Lenehan (piano)
Ryan Wigglesworth
(conductor)
This lunchtime concert was the second in the world premiere tour of Ryan
Wigglesworth’s Tenebrae, so did not quite mark the work’s first
performance, that honour having been bestowed upon Krakow two days earlier.
Scored for two violins, viola, ’cello, flute, English horn, French horn, and
piano, it was conducted by Wigglesworth himself. Nicholas Daniel proved an able
advocate for the opening English horn solo, a feature of the work which provided
a connection with the fourth of the Oliver Knussen pieces and, at a slight
remove, the Britten quartet for oboe, violin, viola, and ’cello. There were dark
shadows (tenebrae) but also menacing life – or should that simply be
obscured life? – emerging from within those shadows. The piano part, performed
commandingly by John Lenehan, punctuated such outbursts, as did telling
silences. Wigglesworth clearly has a keen ear for harmony – and also for
harmonic rhythm, the two not always going together. I liked the dramatic flow,
perhaps in some sense related – but here I am merely speculating – to the
Tenebrae Service or to the psalms recited therein? At any rate, no specific
programme was required; this haunting and impressive piece can stand perfectly
well upon its own merits.
Oliver Knussen’s Songs without voices had opened the programme, itself
put together by Knussen. Scored for violin, viola, ’cello, flute, clarinet,
English horn, French horn, and piano, these four miniatures once again received
a fine performance under Wigglesworth’s baton. The first, Fantastico
(Winter’s Foil) was almost literally buzzing with life and beautifully
melodious too. In a sense, Schoenberg met Ravel, or the febrile combined with
the sensuous; but this is not to imply anything other than Knussen’s own voice.
With the second piece, Maestoso (Prairie Sunset), the music both became
more angular and appeared to strain towards a broader (prairie?) canvas. Copland
did not seem so very far away, especially in the stillness leading to something
more ecstatic. The very short third piece, Leggiero (First Dandelion),
was similar in some respects to the first, albeit with a very strong rhythmic
profile and even more pronounced ‘French’ sonorities. These three songs, we
learned from Knussen’s programme note, were each ‘a complete poem ... “set”
syllable for instruments in the course of a movement’. The final song, however,
is owed ‘to a more private lyrical impulse’, an English horn melody he wrote
upon hearing of the death of Andrzej Panufnik. Nicholas Daniel’s opening
invocation signalled a considerably darker piece, a lament even. His instrument
was joined by the piano and subsequently the rest of the ensemble, but remained
the principal voice throughout. That said, fantastic flute writing, a ruminative
clarinet part, and more Romantic tones from strings and the horn also made their
presence felt, bringing this distinguished work to a moving conclusion.
Britten’s Phantasy Quartet was obviously not conducted; nor would the
final work be. Here, the relationship of Daniel’s oboe to the three string
players helped mark out the work’s form with admirable clarity. To begin with,
the oboe sounded very much as a solo instrument set against a bloc of three
strings. As time went on, that initial distinction broke down somewhat – both in
score and performance – and the stringed instruments acquired more clearly
defined solo voices of their own. There was a pleasing depth to Martin Outram’s
viola and a recognisably ‘English pastoral’ ecstasy to the high ’cello part,
well projected by Caroline Dearnley. The section sat out by the oboe enabled
these voices and that of Jacqueline Shave’s violin to develop further, before
Daniel once again could spin his phantastical line, setting the scene for the
final ’cello pizzicato subsiding into nothingness.
The only disappointment lay in the performance of Schoenberg’s transcription of
Johann Strauss’s Kaiserwalzer. It is a delight, of course, and I have to
admit preferring it to the original; less whipped cream allows one better to
taste what lies beneath. Written for the Pierrot ensemble, plus second
violin and viola, it should breathe the air of Viennese café society. On this
occasion, the rhythmically insistent opening, lacking in rubato and
Schwung, set an all-too-serious and often plodding precedent for what was to
come. Strauss – and Schoenberg too – should waltz, not trudge. There were also
occasional minor lapses in ensemble, something I had not noticed at all in the
other works performed. Jacqueline Shave on first violin and Joy Farrall on
clarinet seemed to be enjoying themselves but the other players would have
benefited from smiling more, even if only internally. It was all rather
effortful.
Mark Berry
The concert has been recorded for future broadcast on BBC Radio 3.
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