Monday, 30 October 2023

BENNETT & DUKE VIOLIN CONCERTOS + TCHAIKOVSKY 4 & 6 / Singapore Symphony Orchestra / Review




BENNETT VIOLIN CONCERTO 

AND TCHAIKOVSKY 4

Singapore Symphony Orchestra

Friday 13 October 2023

Esplanade Concert Hall

 

DUKE VIOLIN CONCERTO 

AND TCHAIKOVSKY 6

Singapore Symphony Orchestra

Friday (27 October 2023)

Esplanade Concert Hall


This review was published in The Straits Times on 30 October 2023 with the title "Forgotten works ably revived in recording project". 

 

The latest recording project of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra showcased the revival and Asian premieres of long forgotten violin concertos by two 20th century American composers better known for their work in popular and stage music. These were showcased in two concerts with British violinist Chloe Hanslip and SSO’s former principal guest conductor Andrew Litton, coupled with two Tchaikovsky symphonies.



 

Robert Russell Bennett (1894 to 1981) is remembered for his orchestrations of Broadway musicals including The Sound of Music and South Pacific. His four-movement Violin Concerto from 1941 straddled between serious and light music. Opening like an outtake from Leroy Anderson’s Sleigh Ride, the solo violin’s confident entry was however a show of serious intent.



 

Hanslip’s prowess was amply displayed in a serious old-school cadenza, and exciting perpetual motion later exhibited in the third and fourth movements. The latter possessed the same frenetic energy and pace in the finale of Samuel Barber’s famous violin concerto. The beautiful slow movement, with lush orchestral strings, hinted strongly that this was glorified film music.   



 

The following Friday saw the 1943 Violin Concerto by Vladimir Dukelsky (1903 to 1969), better known by his Americanised alias Vernon Duke. Composer of popular jazz standards like April In Paris and Taking a Chance on Love, his three-movement concerto was a longer work made of sterner stuff. To borrow a metaphor, Duke’s was chalk to Bennett’s cheese.



 

It was hard to discern what key the concerto was in, its dissonant and chromatic idiom defying  attempts, but the virtuosity was never in doubt. Hanslip had to dig deep into a long and thorny cadenza midway through the first movement. The second movement was a waltz, but not anything like Strauss. Its mock sentimentality and elusive melody put paid to all pretense, besides it closed with three abrupt and bumpy chords.  

 

The imaginative theme and variations finale echoed modern German composer Paul Hindemith’s astringency, leading one to conclude that composers had be taken seriously if they sounded like neo-Bachian Hindemith or atonal Schoenberg, preferably both. Whose concerto would better stand the test of time, Bennett or Duke? Judging by these performances, the deeper and more substantial Duke would edge the lighter and more entertaining Bennett.     



 

About Tchaikovsky, one would scarcely have encountered a more passionate reading of his Fourth Symphony in F minor. Its opening “Fate” motif was brilliantly nailed by the brass in imperious form, summing up its gripping narrative on a whole. Rachel Walker’s solo oboe stood out in the slow movement while massed pizzicato strings swamped the Scherzo with a wall of sonority. The hell-for-leather ride in the blistering finale made it all the more memorable.

 



 

More melodrama came in the Sixth Symphony in B minor, or the Pathetique, one week later. If there were a composer’s suicide letter, this would be it. Unrelieved gloom enveloped its opening, conductor Litton’s vision ensured its grim message was understood by all. The furious fugato of a development was gripping, contrasted by the faux gentility of the second movement’s bittersweet waltz.



 

The Scherzo's relentless march was crafted as the ultimate study in crescendo (that is until Shostakovich’s Leningrad Symphony almost 50 years later) and a quickening of pace made it even more thrilling. As if to forestall inappropriate premature applause, the finale’s Adagio lamentoso followed without a break, and the composer’s desperate descent into despondancy became complete. Performed by the orchestra with knowing sympathy and requisite pathos, there could be no more gut-wrenching finality to a symphony such as this.  

A review of the 13 October 2023 concert as published on Bachtrack.com:

Robert Russell Bennett’s Violin Concerto revived in Singapore | Bachtrack

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