Thursday, October 6, 2016

An Enchanted Evening from the Canton Symphony Orchestra




An Enchanted Evening from the Canton Symphony Orchestra

By Tom Wachunas


    The October 1 concert by the Canton Symphony Orchestra (CSO) was billed as “You Asked For It!” Last year, concert goers were given a list of three works in three categories from which to choose for this season’s opening program. As CSO Music Director Gerhardt Zimmermann reminded us at evening’s start, we chose well. I’m also happy to report that Zimmermann asked his colleague, Eric Benjamin, to compose a new work for the occasion.

   In his program notes for the World Premiere of his Occasional Overture, Benjamin wrote that he was particularly inspired by Mozart’s overture to The Marriage of Figaro, which he characterized as “…this little moto perpetuo that scurries, fizzes, explodes, dazzles, charms and does not overstay.”  Those words are certainly a fitting description of the aural titillations that Benjamin realized with his own overture in decidedly grand fashion. The short work (I actually wished it could have stayed a bit longer) is a glittering reverie of orchestral colors and textures. With a dizzying array of spicy variations in melody, rhythms, and tempi, this sonic casserole is a delightful dismantling of the time-honored sonata form. Complex but seamless, it tickles and teases at every turn, imparting the wondrous sensation of soaring through an enchanted kingdom on a fairy tale world.

   Interestingly, Mr. Benjamin’s adventuresome piece was an effective lead-in to what followed: Mozart’s Die Zauberflote (The Magic Flute) Overture. Not surprisingly, the orchestra navigated its energetic mix of comical and dramatic developments with sparkling fluidity.

   The centerpiece of the evening featured guest pianist Sara Davis Buechner in a soul-stirring performance of the notoriously challenging (for orchestra and soloist) Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, by Sergei Rachmaninoff. If it can be said that Rachmaninoff is a language, then Buecher speaks it with riveting authority and remarkable tonal warmth.

    At times her distinctively animated playing style exhibited all the lilting finesse of a ballet dancer, at others the ferocity of an impassioned orator. Time seemed to stand still during her delivery of Variation 7, the Dies Irae, wherein her thunderous playing exuded not so much overwhelming morbidity, but rather a delectable solemnity. Then, at the breathtaking emergence of the iconic Eighteenth Variation, we in the audience could literally read the nuanced dialogue between soloist and ensemble in Buecher’s swaying posture, the seeming weightlessness of her facile hands, and the radiant look of aching ecstasy on her face. Like her, we were spellbound. And soon, we were even more caught up in the electrifying thrust of the final section. Through it all, Buechner’s marvelous virtuosity was never a matter of gratuitous flashiness, but always purposeful and emotionally gripping. 

   After our exuberant standing ovation, Buechner returned to the stage and dedicated her encore to Maestro Gerhardt Zimmermann. She poured herself into a deeply poignant rendition of Gershwin’s “The Man I Love.” She spoke for all of us.

    Speaking of that man, there was nothing forced or frenetic about his deportment as he conducted the evening’s final selection, Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9 (From the New World). Not that there ever is. Yet with only the subtlest of hand movements, or a slight tilt of his head, he clearly elicited astonishing articulations from this highly gifted ensemble – the fierceness of percussion and brass, the ravishing winds, the palpable warmth and depth of the strings.  In this altogether splendid reading of Dvořák’s richly colored, sweeping vision, the Largo movement was especially engaging, driven by that noble melody on English Horn (later to become the well-known spiritual, Going Home), and here played with heartrending clarity by Cynthia Warren. 
  
   Under Zimmermann’s astute direction, Dvořák was a perfect choice for exhibiting the CSO’s uncanny ability to seamlessly balance penetrating grace with unmitigated muscularity, gentle lyricism with compelling power. Going home indeed, who could ask for more?

1 comment:

  1. Would love to have been there for that Rachmaninoff piece!

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