To paraphrase Richard Strauss’ advice to young conductors: “If you think the brass are playing too soft, ask them to play softer.” Manfred Honeck, music director of the Pittsburgh Symphony, clearly thinks that the brass can never play loudly enough. On Sunday he brought to New York his boisterous interpretation of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony, on a program balanced with two examples of more refined musical expression.
First was the New York premiere of Silent Spring, a tone-poem by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Steven Stucky. The work was commissioned by the orchestra in honor of the fiftieth anniversary of the book by the same name, written by pioneering environmentalist (and Pittsburgh native) Rachel Carson. Silent Spring the book brought public attention to the threat that chemical pesticides posed to the environment and human health. Stucky chose evocative chapter headings from the book to create a varied, effective work with “its own dramatic and emotional journey.”
The first section, “The Sea Around Us,” began with low tonalities in the contrabassoon and harp, growing in volume and intensity before reaching a vehement brass chorale. A few woodwind noodles along the way recalled Debussy's La mer. A lonely English horn wandered among murky strings and winds in “The Lost Wood.” High sighs in the strings and slow descending lines in the winds resembled the Tristan Prelude played backwards. A piano built the spooky music to a height, leading us into “Rivers of Death.” Strong brass chords ushered in an anguished, fleeting section with divided violins, like watching a rainstorm on a lake. The last section, “Silent Spring,” began with soulful strings, with voices dropping out one by one. The bass clarinet took one of the last phrases, then a gong and timpani sounded, until we were left listening to nothing except our own selves. Carson’s point exactly. It was a varied, beautiful piece, given a thoughtful, committed reading. Here’s hoping it gets played some more.
What’s not to like about Hilary Hahn? Gorgeous in a poppy-colored gown with her long white arms moving with an elegance that matches her flawless technique, she played with a startlingly resonant sound, tasteful interpretation, and an evenness of tone no matter what she was playing. In Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto no. 1, she floated her tone nicely on the piece’s many singing moments, added hints of portamento, and dug in energetically as needed. But it was largely a straight performance, without risks. The one noteworthy exception came in the rambunctious second movement, when she played some ponticello passagework with an appropriately gritty, dry sound that leapt out of the texture. Hahn is certainly capable of moments like that; why doesn’t she give more? For an encore she played a hushed, nuanced account of the Sarabande from Bach’s Second Partita.