In Canada, vagabond hockey teams comprised of retired NHL greats draw huge crowds wherever they play. Adapting that concept, the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal invited back three musical dynamos, all of whom had earned a first place victory in an OSM Competition. However these three are a long way from being past their prime. Violinist Blake Pouliot (2016 winner), cellist Bryan Cheng (2019) and pianist Angela Hewitt (1975) joined forces for a performance of Beethoven's Triple Concerto.
Prior to the main event, French conductor Laurence Equilbey led the OSM in Beethoven's Coriolan Overture. Aside from an unfortunate mishap just prior to the conclusion, the orchestra offered a well honed reading. Anomalously, there was absolutely no crescendo on the tied whole notes followed by a staccato quarter note motif that is oft stated in this overture. Although the score does not indicate a crescendo on those tied whole notes, the intensity, if not the volume, is usually ratcheted up, but not in this interpretation, arguably with stultifying consequences. In general, a more dramatic and passionate reading would have been welcomed. Perhaps the OSM players were jet-lagged from their recent European tour, or they were weakened by the absence of a sizeable contingent of their top tier members who sat out this concert.
Fortunately the evening's three soloists brought phenomenal energy and commitment to the Triple Concerto. Cheng's passionate lyricism was a standout and Pouliot followed suit when the solo line was handed off to him. Beethoven wrote the solo piano part for one of his patrons who was an accomplished but not virtuosic pianist; nonetheless the legendary Hewitt, who has quite possibly eclipsed fellow Canadian Glenn Gould as the premier interpreter of Bach's keyboard works, maximized the expressiveness and emotional impact of her role.