The Radio Kamer Filharmonie gave a riveting performance of orchestral works of the late 18th century under the direction of Masaaki Suzuki this weekend at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw. The theme of the afternoon dealt with the brief but highly influential German artistic movement dubbed Sturm und Drang. Originating in around the 1770s, this aesthetic outburst formed first in the fields of literature and philosophy while having cross-disciplinary reaches to the areas of music, painting and theater.
The visionaries of this time were proponents of an individual expression often imbued with sudden, often violent shifts in action intending to surprise, even shock, its public. It was thought that the prevalent rationality of the Enlightenment philosophy of the day was simply not all-encompassing enough for the human experience; these artists, whether they were writers, composers or painters, wished to push against this status quo and show just how wide the human range of emotions could go.
Under the direction of Masaaki Suzuki, the orchestra was in experienced and wise hands. Already a leader in the early music scene as the leader of the Bach Collegium Japan and a frequent guest conductor of some of the world’s greatest Baroque ensembles, Suzuki brings a certain verve for the music of this time period.
The program itself consisted of two giants of this repertoire, W.A. Mozart and Joseph Haydn. The lesser known Joseph Martin Kraus’ Sinfonia con fugato per la chiesa (1789), however, was a welcome treat to the ear as the program’s opening work. True to its tempo and character indications, the piece was played in the most “maestoso” approach, offering robust accentuation from the bass while still allowing the upper strings and woodwinds to punch out of the texture from above.