New music was the main and sole dish that last Tuesday’s Green Umbrella Concert at Disney Hall laid out, but for some audience members their encounter with these works might not be their first. To paraphrase NBC’s late 1990s marketing for its prime-time TV summer reruns: “If you haven’t heard it, it’s new to you.” John Adams’ Son of Chamber Symphony was heard last December performed by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, while Joseph Pereira’s Concerto for Percussion and Chamber Orchestra had its world première at Disney Hall just a little over a year ago. Unsuk Chin’s Graffiti, which had its world première on this program, was brand new, though a few people in the hall might have heard Southwest Chamber Music’s performance of her Cosmigimmicks earlier that month across the street at Zipper Hall.
The forces for the first two works were a little different this time around, with the composers themselves present and performing; Gustavo Dudamel conducting the pieces by Pereira and Unsuk Chin.
Adams, who serves as the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Creative Chair, directed a Son of Chamber Symphony that was punchier than Jeffrey Kahane’s approach at the Alex Theatre in Glendale; a bit more loose. Kahane was smoother with a hint of Viennese sweetness to take the tang out of the composer’s peppery Stravinskian rhythms. Taking the opposite tack, Adams pushed the piece’s jerky syncopations front and center, at times creating a mood that edged on the frenetic. The composer was perhaps best in the outer movements; Kahane’s sensitivity to songful nuances heard to better effect in the central movement. But one felt fortunate to enjoy a score that could inspire such differing – and equally valid – approaches.
On shakier ground was Pereira’s Concerto for Percussion and Chamber Orchestra. The composer’s program notes explaining the work as an exploration between pitched and unpitched notes and the “oscillation between both directions” was more fascinating than the actual work itself.