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AND HEARD UK CONCERT REVIEW
Mendelssohn, Mozart, Schubert: Paul Lewis (piano), Scotish Chamber Orchestra / Andrew Manze (conductor) Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh, 7.1.2009 (SRT)
Mendelssohn: The Fair Melusine
Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 27 in B flat K595
Schubert:
Symphony No. 4 in C minor “Tragic”
In a year of
many musical anniversaries, the Scottish Chamber Orchestra has
chosen to focus on Mendelssohn, perhaps due to his well known
Scottish connections. This concert kicks off their Mendelssohn
200 series and there will be much more to follow. This concert
opened with his concert overture The Fair Melusine, inspired
by a myth similar to that of Rusalka where a water sprite
goes through many sacrifices to win the love of a mortal. It’s
often said that the rippling opening theme inspired the Rheingold
prelude, and the SCO winds deserve real praise for the skilful way
they negotiated the quick-fire notes while maintaining the legato.
The stormier second theme also pulled no punches with a real edge
given to the music by the use of natural timpani and brass. If this
is a mere curtain raiser then the SCO’s journey into the more
substantial Mendelssohn repertoire later this month holds much to
look forward to.
Paul Lewis joined them for the Mozart concerto. After his recent cycle of Beethoven sonatas on Harmonia Mundi it seems that Lewis can do no wrong and he brought real star quality to this often understated concerto. His playing was bright and lithe, matched by a pared down orchestra who found the delicacy in this late masterpiece. We found surprises too, however, such as the brief cadenza at the start of the first movement’s development where genuine darkness threatened the sunny mood. The sublime slow movement seemed to hang in suspended animation; the piano’s solos held a beautiful stillness while the orchestra commented with calm subtlety. There was a genuine bounce to the rondo finale, though a more melancholic feel wasn’t too far away. The magical entry of the strings after the final cadenza was beautifully understated.
It was in the Schubert, however, that conductor Andrew Manze seemed most at home. He conducted this youthful masterpiece with palpable energy and drive, and the orchestra responded in kind. The SCO are among the greatest exponents of period-style playing on modern instruments: this skill enriched all the works in the evening, but was at its most potent in the Schubert. The opening C minor chord had a genuinely startling edge to it, and the whole orchestra played with vigour and dynamism in the stormy first movement. The slow movement brought little peace, and the syncopated minuet seemed manic, threatening to spiral out of control. Manze kept a feeling of chaos hovering just below the surface while never allowing the music to seem coarse. When the finale finally did achieve C major the triumph felt rather shallow and unconvincing, surely Schubert’s point all along.
As a treat after the interval we were given the orchestrated version of the Scherzo from Mendelssohn’s Octet which, Manze informed us, was arranged as a substitute for the Minuet of his first symphony for a concert in London. It was great fun, particularly for anyone who knows the original. The wind contribution was again particularly notable, and there were other typically Mendelssohnian touches, such as the timpani strokes which accompanied the final pizzicati. The whole concert was yet another feather in the SCO’s cap, and a great way to launch an anniversary year.
Simon Thompson
By their very nature, requiems contain a lot of soul-searching and a
need to make good with your ‘Maker’ from one side of the grave or
the other. With Verdi’s 1874 Requiem the deceased have not
yet passed through the gates of Heaven and are on the brink of death
and railing against it. Verdi’s deeply-religious work is a monument
to a great man, the Italian
novelist and
poet Allessandro Manzoni whom Verdi revered and who died in 1873.
Verdi began completing the Requiem after his opera Aida
and was at the height of his operatic powers - hence the cliché that
this mass is indeed the composer’s ‘greatest opera’. There are
arguments to say that this is not far from the truth since the
‘Lacrimosa’ was recycled music from Don Carlo and the
beginning of the fearsomely hellish Dies Irae brings us the
sound world of the anvil chorus from Il trovatore. Other
operatic influences include the Aida-like choruses and large
brass choir.
Nevertheless, whilst undoubtedly concerned with death and dying,
Verdi makes this requiem into a celebration of life. David Cairns’
programme note for this London Symphony Orchestra concert supports
this idea and seems to describe Verdi’s wish to transcend death by
reminding us of Arrigo Boito’s comments after seeing Verdi on his
death-bed: ‘Never have I had such a feeling of hatred against death,
of contempt of that mysterious, blind, stupid, triumphant and craven
power … He hated it, for he was the most powerful expression of life
that it is possible to imagine’. It is this ‘powerful expression of
life’ that is the essence of Verdi’s Requiem. The fact that
this performance - and its subsequent repeat a few days later, were
both dedicated to the memory of the conductor, Richard Hickok, taken
from the world of classical music at a relatively young age of 60
only heightened the work’s emotional impact.
The Requiem begins with a whisper and becomes increasingly
noisy and astonishingly complex. Within the limitations of space at
the Barbican, the sound was positively overwhelming and
mind-numbing at times, especially when it came to the Sanctus
but there is evidence that this was precisely the impact Verdi
wished to create. The London Symphony Chorus was sorely tested and
there were many times when only a few words of the liturgical text
could be heard, but it was a heroic sound that they made. The
intensity of the Dies Irae became more terrifyingly
concentrated each time it was recapitulated and from
the
opening pianissimo right through to the Libera Me at the very
end, the London Symphony Chorus’s discipline was a credit to their
coaching under director Joseph Cullen.
Sir Colin Davis’s calm control of the always excellent London
Symphony Orchestra, the choir and soloists ensured a performance of
pure drama and great depth allied to apparently unlimited reserves
of shattering power and passion. Yet within this tumult, he gave us
a number of quieter more refined and lyrical moments that allowed
for poignant reflection.
The work requires four soloists with big voices and even with
Scotland’s Karen Cargill coming in as last-minute replacement for
the previously announced Russian mezzo-soprano, standing alongside
two Americans and a Canadian she completed a formidable quartet. Ms
Cargill has a powerful mezzo voce and was especially moving singing
sang in duet with Christine Brewer’s soprano, as in the Agnus
Dei particularly. Ms Cargill did have the score but did not seem
to need it while it was disappointing once again to see Ms Brewer
with her head down and looking at her music for much of the time. I
found her soprano had a certain fragility at times but she was at
her best as the end of the work approached - both in the Agnus
Dei and also as she called out in the Libera Me. Even so,
for me the top and bottom of her voice lacked the vocal heft of her
colleagues.
The part for the bass soloist in Verdi’s Requiem is not huge
but John Relyea sang it with real conviction and suitably sepulchral
tones, most notably at ‘Mors stupebit et natura’. The most
impressive performance however, was from American tenor Stuart
Neill. On the platform and singing from memory he was a huge
bearlike figure who displayed a wonderfully secure and very loud
voice. I can imagine mutterings from colleagues about a lack of
refinement in his magnificent singing as the ‘Ingemisco’ was
certainly somewhat stentorian but he was capable of the most
surprising moments of delicacy such as at ‘Hostias et preces tibi’
in the Domine Jesu. Such a voice from someone so physically
large is acceptable on the concert platform but his girth must limit
his opportunities in stagings of opera: someone of his build would
have trouble appearing in either heroic or romantic roles.
In duets, trios and when singing all together, the four soloists
were all very impressive; passages like ‘Domine Jesu Christi’ were
incandescent and they made the finale very moving. This memorable
performance – already a contender for concert of the year even
though we only are at the start of January – thoroughly deserved the
standing ovation received by all participants. It was also recorded
and hopefully this deeply convincing Verdi Requiem will have
an afterlife of its own as an LSO Live release sometime in
the future.
Jim Pritchard
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