From Canton Symphony Orchestra, New Music of the Spheres
(l. to r.) Daniel Perttu, Gerhardt Zimmermann, Jeffrey Biegel
By Tom Wachunas
A particularly
gratifying take-away from the May 22 Canton Symphony Orchestra (CSO)
MasterWorks program at Umstattd Hall was that one need not be in an actual rocket
ship to experience the beauties and mysteries of the cosmos.
As this concert so wondrously
demonstrated, an orchestra as sublime as the CSO is itself a carefully constructed
mode of transport. Call it a well-travelled vessel, amply fueled by a
composer’s art, with performance flight plans navigated by the always sure hand
of the conductor at the helm, Maestro Gerhardt Zimmermann.
For all its
surprising brevity, the evening’s opening selection, Starburst, lived up
to its name in captivating fashion. Written for string orchestra in 2012 by American
composer Jessie Montgomery, this single-movement work is a scintillating burst of
her imagination, envisioning the explosive arrival of new stars in a galaxy. The
music is a fast and complex progression of changing aural colors, blending
sweet, fleeting melodies with brisk, emphatic rhythm variations. Montgomery has
called it “…a multidimensional soundscape.” Through all their adroit gliding
and sliding, and their crisp stacatto plucking, the CSO strings soared with remarkable
alacrity.
The next
work on the program was Joseph Haydn’s light-hearted 1777 Overture to the opera buffa, Il
Mondo della Luna (The World on the Moon). The raucous comedy tells the tale
of a rich, gullible old man who loves astronomy, and who refuses to let his two
daughters marry the penniless boyfriends they love. So the couples devise
a devilish theatrical scheme to convince the old man that he’s been transported
to the moon, where he meets the emperor and consents to his daughters’ marriage
to members of the lunar court. The orchestra was an exuberant embodiment of the
music’s symphonic thrust, imbuing it with a spirit of frolicsome majesty.
Following that winsome fantasy, the evening’s
long-awaited centerpiece was the world premiere of A Planets Odyssey, a
piano concerto composed by Daniel Perttu in 2021, and here featuring the
consummate artistry of pianist Jeffrey Biegel. Beginning with the ear-splitting,
brassy blasting of the “Big Bang,” Perttu’s score is, literally and
figuratively, a sensational nonstop trek across millions of miles, lasting approximately
22 minutes.
Perttu’s theme and labyrinthine variations were
inspired by his research into the physical properties and conditions unique to seven
planets (Earth not included) as described by current science. His music
possesses an uncanny acuity for translating visual and tactile phenomena into palpable
realities in themselves, endowing the work with a phantasmagorical
dimensionality. Through it all, the orchestra is much more than an echo or passive
background presence. Every section is called upon to be in constant, active and
loud dialogue with the soloist, and the ensemble here rose to the conversation
with dramatic, even startling power.
What magic this union was! If the orchestra could
be considered as so many celestial bodies, Jeffrey Biegel’s playing was their
collective heartbeat. And ours. His technique was a dazzling defiance of
gravity, a life-affirming pulse that brought a sense of intrepid dancing, or
relentless marching through this journey. While one hand constantly articulated
a spirit of prowling and searching through rapid scales and arpeggios with
crackling precision, the other, often simultaneously, pounded out bright
exclamatory chords, as if declaring or celebrating the discovery of an immense new
spectacle.
Biegel was equally brilliant
in his return to earth, as it were, when performing Chopin’s Andante Spianato
and Grande Polonaise Brillante. While the orchestra’s role in this work is
a relatively quiet one, the ensemble was nonetheless exquisite in its poetic
filling-out of harmonies and colors against the mesmerizing sparkle of Biegel’s
bravura.
The evening
concluded with yet another ascent to breathtaking musical heights in Mozart’s Symphony
No. 41, “Jupiter.” In this return to
what Kenneth C. Viant rightly called in his program notes “an Olympian nobility
and grandeur,” the CSO once again proved itself to be an ebullient tour de
force of symphonic excellence.
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