For Stephen Mulligan, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s assistant conductor, metaphoric lightning has struck twice this year. About a month ago he had to step in for ailing music director Robert Spano, and this week he had to take up the baton again as a replacement for the similarly indisposed guest conductor, Henrik Nanasi. In the latter instance, Mulligan conducted the already scheduled program; this week, the ASO altered the program to accommodate the young assistant.
Mulligan led a strong performance of Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture, which replaced the originally scheduled Dances of Galanta. The Overture begins with a chorale-like introduction in the woodwinds, taken here with a slightly fast tempo, followed by a slightly ragged entry by the violins. Subsequently, however, Mulligan carefully shaped the music by maximizing its dynamic contrasts to increase its dramatic impact, and by introducing some carefully placed ritardandos where the music transitions, for example, from sword fighting to the lovers’ balcony embrace. The famous love theme was played sweetly by the ASO winds and strings. This was a nicely transparent performance, where every detail of the music could be heard. Surprisingly that transparency was both a strength and a weakness because it unmasked some of the composer’s compositional weaknesses, for example, his sometimes awkward use of horns or woodwinds to provide dramatic accents. Similarly, the composer’s clunky passages that stitch together the work’s four dramatic sections was apparent. In spite of this, the overall performance was quite dramatic and both the ASO and Mulligan provided quite an attention-grabbing concert opening.
The 27-year old Uzbek-born pianist Behzod Abduraimov joined the ASO in a performance of Prokofiev’s Third Piano Concerto, the only piece that had been programmed prior to Mr Mulligan’s stepping in. The Third is likely the most well-known and popular of the composer’s five piano concertos and, in contrast to the Romantic piano concerto repertoire, the orchestra and piano are equal partners in Prokofiev’s music. The concerto makes great technical demands of the soloist, especially in requiring repeated percussive piano effects. Abduraimov has built a portion of his rapidly rising international reputation on both his recorded and numerous live performances of this concerto. While he plays with great muscularity, he is not overly animated at the keyboard, save for an occasional launch from the bench when he needs to add some extra energy.