At first glance, Beethoven isn’t an obvious composer to match up with Ravel and Stravinsky, but Northern Sinfonia’s concert this evening with guest conductor Thierry Fischer did draw out a few surprising parallels. The most notable of these was the spirit of joyfulness and excitement that the orchestra brought out from all three pieces: whether it was the jazz-inspired rhythms of the twentieth century works, the busy energy of the Beethoven, or the attention-grabbing moments in which all three composers delighted.
As an hors d’oeuvre, we were treated to Stravinsky’s marvellous suite from The Soldier’s Tale. It is scored for just seven instruments, but the unusual mixture of violin, double bass, clarinet, bassoon, trumpet, trombone and percussion means that Stravinsky was able to deploy in miniature his mastery of orchestral colouring, and at times it was hard to believe that we didn’t have a full orchestra on the stage.
The suite comes from music written for a small-scale theatrical production, based on a Russian folk tale. A soldier who owns a magic violin is persuaded by the Devil to exchange his violin for unbounded knowledge and riches. The soldier, inevitably, finds that his new wealth becomes a burden, as he succumbs to drink, gambling and a failed love affair, and finally he ends up being marched off to hell by the triumphant Devil.
As might be expected from the story, the violin takes the starring role, but Stravinsky’s writing stretches all the instruments to the limits of their range and demands considerable technical skill from the players. Douglas Mitchell’s intricate clarinet flourishes gave sparkling colour to the relentless drive of Bradley Creswick’s violin, and all seven players gave the piece the panache that Stravinsky requires. The sensuous tango movement was particularly enjoyable, and the precision of the fragmented chorale gave a brief moment of gravitas before the finale. The piece ends abruptly with a long and elaborate drum solo, as the Devil has the final word.
The ragtime movement of The Soldier’s Tale was one of Stravinsky’s first attempts at writing music influenced by jazz, and the jazz theme continued with Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G. The piece opens with a whipcrack, but the orchestra were a little hesitant in their response, until the trumpet entry pulled it together. Gershwin’s influence is strongly felt in this first movement, which at times feels as if it’s quoting directly from Rhapsody in Blue. The trumpets shone throughout, with their crisp, bright tone contrasting the more lyrical piano and harp passages.