Archive for February 7th, 2014

A Happy Orchestra

Friday, February 7th, 2014

by Sedgwick Clark

The musicians of the Philadelphia Orchestra were all smiles at their most recent Carnegie Hall concert, on Monday, February 3. Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin led Smetana’s The Moldau, Bartók’s Piano Concerto No. 3, with Radu Lupu as soloist, and Dvořák’s sunny Symphony No. 6. It’s a happy orchestra now, after several years of economic and artistic uncertainty, and players and audience appear quite satisfied with their new maestro.

I was happy throughout most of this appealingly conservative program, too, but I was also surprised to hear forced and unblended string sonority at times, and by a lack of quiet playing. Few pieces of music require a greater sense of flow than The Moldau, and to my ears, a succession of single notes often dominated a fluid line.

Bartók was on his deathbed when he composed his gentle Third Piano Concerto as a performance vehicle for his wife, pianist Ditta Pásztory-Bartók. Lupu played the work at his most recent New York appearance, as I recall. The second movement—one of Bartók’s exquisite “night music” pieces—chirped raptly in Lupu’s hands, and the closing Allegro vivace danced energetically. N-Z’s accompaniment was well judged, never overwhelming the soloist.

Dvořák’s Sixth Symphony is unfairly overshadowed by his last three masterworks of the form, and N-Z’s performance was a treat, with an especially deeply felt Adagio. The audience had offered a warm welcome to N-Z at the beginning of the concert, and it roared its approval at the end. He has New York’s Philadelphia fans on his side now.

I sometimes wondered if N-Z were trying too hard, however, unwilling to allow the mellow Romanticism to unfold naturally. I felt this when he conducted Carmen at the Met a few years ago (although his Rusalka last week was ravishing). The sound coaxed from the Philadelphians by Michael Tilson Thomas two months ago when he subbed for the indisposed N-Z at Carnegie was positively velvety in comparison (my blog, 1/9/14).

Looking Forward

My week’s scheduled concerts (8:00 p.m. unless otherwise noted):

2/9 Carnegie Hall. Garrick Ohlsson, piano. Beethoven: Sonata No. 30, Op. 109. Schubert: “Wanderer” Fantasy, D. 760. Griffes: The Night Winds; Barcarolle; The White Peacock. Chopin: Sonata No. 3, Op. 58.
2/11 Carnegie Hall. Boston Symphony/Bernard Haitink; Murray Perahia, piano. Purcell/Steven Stucky: Funeral Music for Queen Mary. Schumann: Piano Concerto. Brahms: Symphony No. 4.
2/12 Carnegie Hall. Boston Symphony/Bernard Haitink; Susan Graham, mezzo; Tanglewood Festival Chorus. Ravel: Alborado del gracioso; Shéhérazade; Daphnis et Chloé (complete).

2/13 Carnegie Hall. St. Petersburg Philharmonic/Yuri Temirkanov; Denis Kozhukhin, piano. Rimsky-Korsakov: Excerpts from The Legend of the Invisible City of Kitezh. Kancheli: . . . al Niente. Tchaikovsky: Concerto No. 1.