To celebrate the arrival of the Chinese Year of the Pig, Elim Chan, Principal Guest Conductor of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and Chief Conductor Designate of the Antwerp Symphony Orchestra, lead the Los Angeles Philharmonic with energetic efficiency through a high-powered program of Chinese and French music that began and ended with virtuoso showpieces written less than 30 years apart.
The main attraction was the world premiere of an LA Phil commission, Du Yun's 17-minute Thirst, a highly-stylized musical theater piece in the tradition of Xinchang Diaoqiang Opera which lasted for five centuries, in which the composer immersed herself beginning in 2017. Delivered with a palette of exquisite expressive gestures and seamless singing by both of the costumed singers, Du Yun's adaptation of an ancient form married to modern freedoms revealed subtleties and flexibilities of form that suggested Monteverdi more than Puccini – although the emotions that lay beneath the music felt viscerally intense.
This third piece in Du Yun's Future Tradition, Revamping Disappearing Folk Arts and Regional Operas in China initiative, dealt elegantly and sadly with how gender identification issues among actors reflect society's cultural differences and how they affect basic human relationships. Introduced by the Phil with blazing brass over moaning strings, Wang Ying as the old man and Zhang Tingfang as the young one in an elaborate dance, told a story through contrasting musical and choreographic styles, the one more colorful, more purely gorgeous, and the other more abstract, spiritually ascendant. It was a good piece to know, and would be for a second time. Let's hope the Phil doesn't wait for the next Chinese New Year program to play it again.