Cheers greeted Gustavo Dudamel when he came on stage and even more followed his rousing performance with the Los Angeles Philharmonic of John Williams's Olympic Theme, the first of his four fanfares for the Olympic Games. Featuring superhero heraldic strains with a big broad melody out of Technicolor westerns, lots of heavy artillery echoing Bernard Herrmann's scores for Patton and On Dangerous Ground, and the kind of frantic scribbling in the strings that reminded me of why studio musicians, used to sitting around in long boring recording sessions, love Williams for all the notes he writes, the music ended with some seismic drumming that recalled the early days of digital when Telarc threatened to blow out loudspeakers with the cannons in the 1812 Overture.
Gabriela Ortiz' Altar de cuerda, an ambitious 30-minute violin concerto written for Maria Dueñas and the LA Phil in 2021, showed off the young Spaniard's technical dazzle, her incomparable theatrical timing and her ability to completely commit to the music she is playing. Since it was written for them it's the type of music the LA Phil eats up, outstandingly precise not just to notes and intonation but to expressive markings and dynamic changes. Its three movements of emotional events, dreamspaces and soundscapes, sometimes jeweled, sometimes weighed down by bass heavy clumps, are all laid down for the soloist to range ethereally through a series of cadenzas of various lengths and intensities.
Morisco chilango is a nod to Dueñas's Andalusian roots. Canto abierto colors its reflections on the embrace by 16th-century Mexican churches of indigenous peoples with a background of eight tuned crystal glass virtuosos (percussionists and brass players) making ghostly sounds, like Mozart's glass harmonica or, as I just read, James Horner's theme for Mr Spock in the The Wrath of Khan. Maya déco is a spectacular tour de force, a disjointed perpetuum mobile at a jaunty pace, set by the drum with the brass, back at their usual stands, and Dueñas in the biggest of the cadenzas flashing arpeggios and double-stops triggering soaring lyrical flights ending in a frantic rush of saints and lights, one more cadenza and one last orchestral outburst.