Esplanade
Concert Hall
Sunday (3 July 2016 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 5 July 2016 with the title "First-rate performance from Lucerne orchestra".
Founded in 1806, the Lucerne Symphony
Orchestra (Luzerner Sinfonieorchester) is Switzerland 's oldest orchestra. It
makes its home at the Lucerne Cultural and Congress Centre (KKL Luzern),
playing in its concert hall with acoustics designed by Russell Johnson, who was
also responsible for Esplanade Concert Hall. It was thus of great interest to
hear a foreign orchestra performing in the Singapore venue that is a “first
cousin” to its residence.
Conducted by exciting American conductor
James Gaffigan, there was enough on display in the brief Euryanthe Overture by Carl Maria von Weber, serving as
curtain-raiser, to demonstrate a first rate orchestra's credentials. The
homogeneous sound from the strings was a delight, warm and burnished,
complementing well winds and brass for what made for ideal balance. When it
came to a quieter passage for just eight violins, the results were no less
fine.
The orchestra also provided perfect
accompaniment to young Georgian pianist Khatia Buniatishvili in Grieg's Piano Concerto. Nowhere did ensemble
play second fiddle to the fiery and glamourous soloist who had the requisite
technique to raise hell and melt glaciers. From opening chords and octave
cascade, the piano's first subject to Lisztian cadenza, this was a nuanced performance that possessed both flowing
lyricism and outright virtuosity.
In the slow movement, where one might
have expected her to let rip in the chordal climax, she held back and the
outcome was all the better for it. The bounding Norwegian dance finale was a
hell-for-leather ride, the sight further enhanced by her hibiscus red gown and
wildly flailing jet-black locks. Her two encores were diametrical opposites,
the Precipitato finale of Prokofiev's
Seventh Sonata taken at a scarcely
believable break-neck speed and the ultimate grace of a Handel-Kempff Minuet.
It was wholly the orchestra's show in the
second half. Dvorak's Eighth Symphony
on tour does not quite have the same glamour of a Mahler or Bruckner symphony,
or even the Czech composer's own New
World Symphony. That was all moot with Gaffigan's cogent and totally
idiomatic view of an overplayed repertoire work with his charges responding
accordingly.
The mellow massed cello song that
constituted its first bars were gorgeously voiced, thus setting a high bar to
the rest of the symphony which unfolded most majestically. Both the 1st
and 2nd movements rose to stirring climaxes, the latter beginning with
excellent solo and ensemble work from the woodwinds.
The carefree lilt in the 3rd movement's
Slavonic dance was sheer delight, and the trumpet call to arms in the
march-like finale provided the necessary rousing. Its build up of volume and
impetus made for one of Dvorak's most thrilling symphonic moments, and so it
transpired, was not once but twice all the way to its blazing conclusion.
Gaffigan and his orchestra bade farewell
with the final two movements from Dvorak's American
Suite played in reverse order. The Allegro's
ethnic-styled folkdance was followed by the nostalgic Andante with its lovely oboe solo, further proof of the orchestra's
undoubted prowess.
Conductor James Gaffigan and pianist Khatia Buniatishvili took time off to meet with the children and parents of MINDS. |
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