As turmoil continues to take its emotional toll in Hong Kong, William Congreve’s well known (and often misquoted) line from his 1697 poem The Mourning Bride seems more poignant than ever, “Musick hath charms to soothe a savage breast”. Friday evening’s invigorating performance by the HK Philharmonic under Jaap van Zweden with celebrated soprano Renée Fleming in the Cultural Centre’s Concert Hall not only oozed charm but provided good healthy doses of beauty and wit along the way.
The detox began well as van Zweden and the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra set off on Wagner’s emotional rollercoaster ride of love, death and desire in Tristan und Isolde's Prelude und Liebestod. Opting here for the soprano-free version, presumably as an orchestral showcase, Friday’s (diminished) audience were kept well-perched on their pews. It had the makings of religious event. For sure, early jitters in woodwind entries lead to some murky tapering off of chords. But these were merely minor irritants. The players soon settled into a fabulous sound zone and blossomed magnificently. Regardless of dynamic, the HK Phil’s finely focused string sound never faltered and in van Zweden’s highly capable hands, the yearning phrases were deliciously shaped and sustained, never letting up in their quest for eventual resolution.
Celebrated American soprano Renée Fleming then took stage for arrangements of Franz Schubert’s Three Songs for Soprano and Orchestra and compatriot Samuel Barber’s evocative Knoxville: Summer of 1915 for Soprano and Orchestra.
In Fleming’s soothing and expressive reading of Barber’s Knoxville, one could well have been catapulted onto a Wizard of Oz-like set, complete with rocking chairs on a rickety porches and vivid scenes of summer evening serenity as she sang lovingly of peaceful childhood memories with gorgeous lilts in her soprano and wonderful suspension and release.