Dvořák,
Milhaud, Varèse: Marin Alsop (cond), Ken Burton (cond), London Philharmonic
Orchestra, London Adventist Chorale, Royal Festival Hall, London.
Three
Spirituals
Dvořák:
Symphony No. 9
Milhaud:
La creation du Monde
Varèse:
Amériques
The
programme for this evening’s concert was a mess, and I blame Alex Ross. Its
role in the Rest is Noise season is clear enough, but the Europeans-in-America
theme was curated with a heavy hand. From a historical perspective, the choices
of composers and works were obvious, but they sit well together. On top of
that, the idea of beginning with real spirituals and then moving straight into Dvořák
Nine meant that the whole programme had to be reversed, with the symphony in
the first half and the curiosities in the second.
I’ve
never subscribed to the view that African-American spirituals form the melodic
and/or spiritual basis of the New World Symphony, so perhaps the first half of this
concert was aimed at listeners like me. A gospel choir, the London Adventist
Chorale, opened the concert, and their performance segued directly into the
opening of the Dvořák. The congruence between the spirituals and the symphony
was blatantly engineered by the inclusion of Going Home a setting of the cor anglais solo from Dvořák’s second
movement in the form of a spiritual. But even that failed to make the case.
The
choir was on top form, and their short performance was a highlight of the
concert. With only twenty singers, they struggled to fill the hall with sound,
but the sheer beauty of their tone ensured that everybody listened intently.
They performed a simple, homophonic setting of Deep River, a jazzy Swing Low
Sweet Chariot, and a setting of Going
Home that even followed Dvořák’s harmonies and textures.
As
the choir ended the orchestra began, but there was little continuity here. In
fact the commitment of the singers, the precision of their ensemble and the
elegance of their tone, were in stark contrast to the messy, incoherent
orchestral playing that followed. Given the challenges of the second half, the
majority of the rehearsal time was presumably given over to the Varèse. But did
they even run the Dvořák? Considering the consistently high standards the
London Philharmonic usually maintains, this was an amazingly sloppy
performance. Alsop clearly has a vision for the symphony. She’s keen to drive
the outer movements like it’s Beethoven Five, and both of the inner movements
are about steady, insistent tempos. But she wholly failed to communicate any of
this to the orchestra, and the result was leaden, incoherent playing, poor
balance within the orchestra and a distinct lack of poise at almost every turn.
The
second half opened with Milhaud’s La
creation du Monde, a piece that requires a programme of this sort to
justify its presence in an orchestral concert, but that acts as effective palate
cleanser between the more substantial works. Milhaud seems to be taunting the
orchestral players with all the jazzy licks he expects them to struggle with,
but this time the joke was on him, as all the pseudo-jazz came off beautifully.
Special mention should go to Andrew Barclay, whose nonchalant kit drumming
succinctly set the tone.
The
concert ended with a bang, or several rather, in the form of Varèses’s Amériques. As soon as it began it was
clear where all the rehearsal time had gone. The London Philharmonic fielded about
the largest band you’ll ever see in the Festival Hall, including an
unprecedented 12 percussionists (that’s apart from the two timpanists) vying
for elbow room at the back of the stage. This time, Alsop set the pace more
carefully and paid much greater attention to the many details of the score.
Balance within the ensemble was impressive, with those crucial woodwind
textures shining through, even against the large brass section. Some of the
quieter passages sagged, but the composer should take as much blame for this as
the conductor. And the ending was fabulous, with Alsop managing to increase the
volume and density of sound, even over the repeated extremes that make up most
of the piece, to give the final page that extra impact. An impressive end,
then, to a variable concert, one which struggled to make sense on its own
terms, despite its pedantically themed programme. Let’s hope that later
offerings in The Rest is Noise are
more consistently inspired and make a better case for every work, not just the
ones with the loudest bells and whistles.
LPO were sloppy the last time I heard them - it got rave reviews and copious applause anyway. I don't think quality of execution matters to the audience any more, sadly.
ReplyDeleteMuch of last night's audience was made up of students on some LPO ticket scheme, and they seemed particularly enthusiastic, applauding between movements and such. I disagree though about standards at the LPO. Last night's Dvorak Nine was the first dud I've heard from them in many years.
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