It’s a fairly poor show that I hadn’t been to a Prom in years. Since it is all online and on the radio, there is the tendency to stay home and listen – but this concert was a reminder of quite how worthwhile it is to attend concerts in person. The power of live musical performance was exemplified by this varied programme, performed in a most varied and adaptive way. Prom 6 began with a BBC-commissioned world première: Fung Lam’s Endless Forms.
The opening few phrases rewarded my new-found proximity to the Proms with the suspense of thousands of held breaths – the Royal Albert Hall was sold out and Lam’s ponderous melodies quickly built a keen sense of anticipation. Its theme of evolution was exposed in a most atmospheric fashion; a low gloom was built up in the cellos and violins, which was eventually shaken off with a distinctive syncopated motor and replaced with cautiously optimistic orchestral swells. Such a grand narrative could easily have been hammy or saccharine, but the BBC Symphony Orchestra’s restraint ensured an artful rendering of the piece.
That same cool control was present in the strings’ treatment of Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto no. 2, but such an approach was perhaps a little less appropriate here, given the warm, romantic feelings most audiences have for the piece. Where Kirill Gerstein drew as much sweet drama from the piano as he could, violins ably retorted but I feel underplayed the more romantic of the well-known themes. That said, this was still a fulfilling performance. Wherever possible Gerstein pulled at rallentandos and added to pauses between notes. Such details were much more prominent where orchestra support fell away, and in those moments Gerstein truly mastered the concerto. Much as he did an encore of an arranged ‘I Got Rhythm’, after the audience practically insisted he sit back down and play some more.