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Joyful, showy Bernstein at Cadogan Hall

Por , 04 junio 2018

Bernstein’s centenary is being marked in many ways, and Stéphane Denève brought the Brussels Philharmonic to the Cadogan Hall to offer their homage to one of the 20th century’s most mercurial and incandescent of musical talents. 

Guillaume Connesson is one of the most widely performed French composers working today, and the audience heard his 2017 Le Tombeau des Regrets. Riffing on the title of Ravel’s famous piano miniatures memorialising his friends killed in World War One, Connesson’s piece is similarly personal, though musically less indebted to the piquant melancholy of Ravel’s Neoclassicism. Connesson’s music moves in swoops and swells, with sweeping chromatic washes of texture and colour reminiscent of Scriabin or Samuel Barber. The piece begins with the muffled lower register and the piece’s four themes develop contrapuntally to a huge climax announced by a blast from the tam-tam. 

This use of counterpoint reflects the thematics of the piece: the pain of lost time, of memory and of half-remembered desires tinged with nostalgia. It would make an apt soundtrack for a movie of Proust’s À la Recherche du Temps Perdu, particularly in its coda, where clarinet and celesta evoke with eerie, frozen beauty the toy piano and music box of Connesson’s childhood. 

Bernstein’s 1954 Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium” is as much philosophical reflection as it is concerto showpiece, though there are plenty of pyrotechnics, none of which fazed soloist Liza Ferschtman. Bernstein was aided in writing the solo part by the great Isaac Stern. The orchestration puts the soloist in dialogue with string orchestra, percussion and harp, evocative of Bartók’s Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta, though with a shade more warmth, as befits a piece ruminating on love in all its forms. 

It’s a piece whose five moments are unified by resonant and ringing sounds – xylophone, tubular bells, harp and plucked strings – themselves counterposed by longer, more lyrical string lines. The third movement – a presto Scherzo based on the “Eryximachus” section – was delivered with deftness and élan. In the Rondo finale (“Socrates; Alcibiades”) Denève and Ferschtman egged each other on, amping up the boisterousness with each return of the theme: you could practically smell the booze on Alcibiades’ breath. Ferschtman has an enviable spiccato and a restrained, ornamental approach to vibrato that makes for a highly developed sense of musical line and phrasing. She’s a performer whose charismatic delivery echoes that of Bernstein himself, whose showoff nature is channeled by the violin part.  

The second half saw the brass and winds make their return to the stage for Bernstein’s Three Dance Episodes from On The Town, from a musical that is a love song addressed to New York City itself. This is unapologetically brash music which reeks of sweat and bourbon and got feet tapping. The final movement of the three – “Times Square: 1944” – had the requisite degree of sleaze: in this respect special mention should go to the Brussels Philharmonic’s principal clarinet, trombone and saxophone, who were deliciously indecorous. 

The Symphonic Dances from West Side Story were the culmination of the concert, and one wondered how the orchestra could possibly up the ante. With a little help from the audience: before setting the orchestra off Stéphane Denève reminded us to join in with the shout of “Mambo!” in the famous dance sequence, even giving us the opportunity to rehearse. The Symphonic Dances were arranged under Bernstein’s supervision for full symphony orchestra by Irwin Kostal and Sid Ramin, who had themselves scored the film version of the musical in 1961. The sound world of the Symphonic Dances is quite distinct: richer, fuller, rounder, with more complex textures than the drier, streetwise sound of the Broadway score. 

The Brussels Philharmonic is noted for its strengths in performing and recording film music. It certainly showed in this performance, with lots of Korngoldian lushness and lubrication in the famous “Meeting Scene” and Scherzo. The “Cha-Cha” showed Denève’s eye and ear for the refined orchestration of what we might think of as a rather more fiery and earthy work. The “Mambo” was announced by thunderous percussion, whose vast forces distinguished themselves throughout the evening, and the audience managed to interject at the right time too. Denève gave us big gestures and well-judged climaxes, though that makes it sound rather more calculated and less fun that it actually was. 

No lapsing into sentimentality though: the “Cool” fugue had harder edges, and reminded us that behind avuncular, laid-back Lenny there is the fearsome musical intellect of Bernstein. The “Rumble” was taken at quite a lick but with no loss of dynamic contrast or control of the ensemble: the whole thing teetered, appropriately enough, on a knife-edge, giving way to a smouldering finale. The encore was the overture to Bernstein and Sondheim’s musical Candide. Where do they get the energy? 

****1
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“you could practically smell the booze on Alcibiades’ breath”
Crítica hecha desde Cadogan Hall, Londres el 31 mayo 2018
Connesson, Le Tombeau des regrets
Bernstein, Serenata, a partir de "El banquete" de Platón
Bernstein, On the Town: Three Dance Episodes
Bernstein, West Side Story: Danzas sinfónicas
Bernstein, Candide: Obertura
Liza Ferschtman, Violín
Stéphane Denève, Dirección
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