The pioneering spirit loomed large in this refreshing American smorgasbord. In an invigorating return to the Royal Festival Hall, Santtu-Matias Rouvali and the Philharmonia presented three American composers and one ‘honorary American’, each blazing a trail in their own distinct way, to provide an intriguing carousel of 20th-century century musical sustenance. And as a further reason to keep the champagne fizzing, it was also (give or take a day) the 75th anniversary of the Philharmonia’s very first concert, conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham for the fee of one cigar.
Aaron Copland oozes the American idiom. One of his best-loved works, his Pulitzer Prize-winning Appalachian Spring, tells the story of a young couple preparing for their new life together, which Rouvali presented with clarity and nostalgic warmth. The orchestra was on song from the outset, rich chocolatey strings with searing vibrancy complemented by finely honed wind and brass, and Rouvali directing affairs with sensitivity and instinctive musicality. There was playfulness too, evidenced visually in the faces of conductor and players and through the rhythmic invention and touches of neoclassical purity, enough to recognise a hint of Stravinsky’s influence. The famous Shaker theme glistened like quartz before broadening majestically and transforming into a coda of calming optimism.
Following on from this, a guaranteed dopamine hit – Florence Price’s Dances in the Canebrakes, originally written for piano in 1953, the year of her death, but performed here in William Grant Still’s lively orchestration. Rouvali found the natural lilt and sway of the three slightly jazzy and leisurely African American dances making up this suite: a rag, a slow drag and a cakewalk. The gentle syncopations were nicely judged, and the orchestra effused relaxed fluidity in Price’s highly melodious piece.