There might be a shiver of fear in some quarters when the listener is confronted with the name Nicholas McGegan. Mercilessly rushed tempi, slipshod ensemble—and the wool-on-chalkboard horror of vibratoless strings. Fortunately for his Hollywood Bowl audience last night, McGegan proved to be a genial, good-humored guide through the music of Franz Josef Haydn—and the antithesis to the period performance stereotype.
He does, as expected, favor lean textures and sprightly tempi. Though unlike many of his inflexible colleagues, he is unwilling to sacrifice musical beauty for the sake of ideological dogma. Everything sounds natural; every part tells. And throughout is music-making shot through with a radiant affirmation of life.
The way McGegan shaped Haydn’s Symphony No. 30 “Alleluia” and Symphony No. 103 “Drumroll” evinced a deep sympathy and love for the music. In his hands the scent of the Serbian countryside of Haydn’s youth was never far away. The earthy, peasant humor of his music was given full voice, with the gurgling clarinets in the trio of the “Drumroll’s” scherzo providing one of the many indications of the conductor’s deep love and sympathy for this music.
There is about McGegan something Beecham-like in his ability to give his orchestra’s front-desk players a sense of freedom that allows them to be themselves. The sonorities of the orchestra’s wind players—especially in their rendition of Haydn’s Windsor Castle Overture—resembled characters contentedly pattering away in a wordless opera buffa ensemble piece.