How many times have you heard the Eroica? Among the greatest of Beethoven’s many masterpieces, it stands in testament both to his towering ambition and, with the self-appointed emperor Napoleon’s name scratched in rage from the front page, the iconoclastic, revolutionary spirit that so enamours us to Beethoven to this day. It was strange, then, that I found myself tiring of it during the second of the San Francisco Symphony’s two Proms, directed by Michael Tilson Thomas.
There were fine details, but the whole sounded tired and lacking in energy or drive. Stranger still that it followed excoriating performances of Decoration Day, from Ives’s symphony “New England Holidays” and Bartók’s Second Piano Concerto, with the effortless virtuosity of Yuja Wang. As with their first Prom, the energy and precision that drove the first half to the very heights of musical performance seemed lost in the ‘big piece’; with Mahler in the first Prom and Beethoven in this one, these core repertory pieces seemed over-familiar, lacking the inspiration of constant rediscovery that makes great performances great.
Bartók’s music, changing restlessly from moment to moment, imbued with the metrical irregularity and unpredictability that characterises the folksongs the composer so cherished, thrives on the restless, wide-eyed energy of performers. There are few better for this repertoire than the young Chinese firebrand Yuja Wang, whose blend of vigour and absolutely unbreakable technique mean the formidable octave melodies and fingerwork of Bartók’s Second Piano Concerto pose little challenge.
From the motoric opening movement, set for piano, brass, wind, and percussion, Wang was in her element; shifting rhythmic emphases were brought out with a painstaking and punishing approach to the piano part’s accents. The epic slow movement had a doleful quality, and the finale was launched with madcap abandon. None of this would have been possible without the brilliance of the San Francisco players; the brass and wind were punchy, polished and precise, the slow movement’s strings chillingly ethereal. If the acoustic meant the piano’s upper range was slightly lost, the power coming from the bass end more than made up for it.
Decoration Day is one of those classic Ivesian constructions bringing together great American songs with the height of Modernist technique. Building steadily, a slow hymn gradually gives way to a bombastic marching band which tramples the hall, before a final intimation of the hymn, made more moving for its stoicism in the face of this pomp, closes the piece contemplatively. Tilson Thomas brought out well the earnestness of the song’s melody, emphasising the flow of the melody and the interplay of instruments well. Balancing the climax well, he managed to avoid the effect of over-management of the Sousa-on-steroids march, the trombones’ roaring never covering the strings or the chromatic lines in the horns and wind.