Monday, 23 December 2024

STEVEN ISSERLIS & MARIO VENZAGO / Singapore Symphony Orchestra / Review

 


STEVEN ISSERLIS & MARIO VENZAGO
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Victoria Concert Hall 
Friday (20 December 2024) 

This review was first published in Bachtrack.com on 23 December 2024 with the title "Singapore witnesses Mario Venzago’s completio” of Schubert’s Unfinished". 

The final Singapore Symphony Orchestra event of this year was not a Christmas concert but one with unusual couplings that worked despite its oddities. Led by Swiss guest conductor Mario Venzago, it began fairly predictably with Carl Maria von Weber’s Overture to Der Freischütz


Unison strings and a French horn chorale acquitted themselves well before leading to the Allegro which thrilled with a high speed romp. This standalone orchestral excerpt was an extension of Rossini’s overtures, but Weber in 1821 was already looking ahead to Wagner’s epics to come. 


Receiving its Singapore premiere was Dmitri Kabalevsky’s Cello Concerto No.2 in C minor (Op.77) with British cellist Steven Isserlis as soloist. Kabalevsky is often regarded as a poor man’s Prokofiev or Shostakovich. He avoided the 1948 Zhdanov-led purges by toeing the party line and writing mostly uncontroversial music, much of which for young people. He only trod the path after his more illustrious colleagues had cleared the minefield. 


Despite that, the concerto was a good undemanding listen, with Isserlis a very persuasive advocate (having recorded it on Virgin Classics in 1988) by wringing out drama and pathos through its conjoint three movements. The slow-fast-slow form gave much room for introspection, opening with solo pizzicatos, followed by elegiac musings and the occasional outburst. 


The fast central movement had the surprise of an alto saxophone solo, extrovertedly helmed by Samuel Phua. Isserlis’ solo cadenzas which linked the movements were predictably heart-rending, and animated as his Rattlesque silver locks flew in the air. The ending was quiet and retiring, but clearly moved the audience to applaud vociferously. 


Isserlis reciprocated with two Russian encores in the keys of C, Prokofiev’s March for Children (Op.65 No.10) and Kabalevsky’s Study in Major in Minor (Op.68 No.3) 

Isserlis and his cello
take a bow together.

Also for the first time, the Singapore audience got to witness the completion of Schubert’s “UnfinishedSymphony (D.759), in a four-movement edition by Venzago. The final two movements, he claimed, had been “lost” by his predecessor at the Graz Philhamonic, one Anselm Hüttenbrenner. With the reconstructed movements appended, the playing time is distended to some 46 minutes, thus comparable in scope with Schubert’s “GreatSymphony in C major (D.944). 

Mario Venzago waxes lyrical
about his reconstruction of Schubert's Unfinished.

Performances of the familiar opening movements tend to be expansive, sometimes protracted, but Venzago took them at a more than usual brisk pace. The B minor introduction from cellos and basses was suitably sombre, but the broad main melody in G major ran the risk of sounding harried or impatient. He however provided the impetus that made the music sound coherent, including a pacier Andante con moto in E major which in a paradigm shift, was no longer the symphony’s final movement. Also gone was the notion this was to be some solemn requiem. 


The Scherzo, back in the home key of B minor, was reconstructed from 30 fully orchestrated bars and a short-score. The music was decidedly jocular, consistent with Schubertian scherzi, and a lovely surprise came in the Trio in G major, which most listeners will remember as the Ballet Music No.1 from the incidental music for Rosamunde


The finale was also a case of reverse engineering, incorporating much of the martial music from Entracte No.1 from Rosamunde. But Venzago had a little trick up his sleeve towards the end, a reprise of the sombre first movement introduction now sounding like a distant echo, before closing in a blaze of triumph. An interesting experiment, and the audience liked it. But was it faithful or convincing? Only time will tell.

This review as published on Bachtrack.com:
https://bachtrack.com/review-venzago-isserlis-kabalevsky-schubert-singapore-symphony-december-2024
 
Star Rating: ****


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