In the early years of the 20th century, along the streets of Paris, a society of writers, artists, and musicians—among them Maurice Ravel—known as Les Apaches would exchange the secret greeting devised for members to recognize each other. When one Apache would approach the another, they would whistle the first theme from Borodin's Second Symphony, knowing that when the other whistled back the rest of the theme, they were one of their own.
The secret greeting of the society is a powerful reminder of the fascination that Russian music held for French composers of the era. Through the music of Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Dargomizhsky, and others, composers such as Debussy and Ravel found one of the keys that helped liberate French musical language from the dominance of Teutonic theory.
Stéphane Denève, guest conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic on Tuesday night, has emerged in recent years as an artist of the front rank. Recordings for Naxos and Chandos have borne eloquent testament to a leader that is able to coax pliant, expressive playing with an elegant finish from his orchestras. His appearance before the Philharmonic showed him to be a conductor who is not merely a creation of the studio, but a genuine talent.
The portly, bespectacled Frenchman with his curly mane of fiery red hair, had in his arsenal of conducting gestures a wide array of emphatic motions. His arms swing in wide circles while his face, perspiring heavily, runs a whole gamut of expressive contortions. But despite the extroversion of his technique, the sound he produces is smooth and controlled; never dull. It's his remarkable ear for orchestral balance and clarity that make for an almost visceral thrill to his music-making.
This was heard to stunning effect in Rachmaninov's valedictory orchestral work, the Symphonic Dances. Right from the heavy tread of the opening movement, one felt an unassailable rightness in Denève's approach. Climaxes were carefully prepared and judged; the grip on the work's architecture firm, but never unyielding. He also etched in phrasing of bubbly wit, heard best in the second movement's lumbering, nocturnal waltz.
On the other hand, in Leopold Stokowski's "Symphonic Synthesis" of themes from Mussorgsky's opera Boris Godunov, Denève indulged himself in the work's riot of Technicolor brilliance. The orchestra burst into the score with a panoply of colors worthy of a Titian. No instrumental detail escaped his attention, yet there never was a focus on only the particular. Each individual strand was telling; woven together into a majestic tapestry, shaping a firm ensemble sound.