A
Sassy, Brassy Season Finale
By Tom Wachunas
For
weeks after the March 31 MasterWorks concert by the Canton Symphony Orchestra (CSO),
I couldn’t help feeling that the orchestra’s thunderous performance of
Berlioz’s “Symphonie Fantastique” would
simply be too hard an act to follow in the same season. It had all the
ingredients of a gloriously memorable season-ending event, leaving the audience
summarily awestruck.
On
paper at least, the program for the actual season finale on April 28 - Janacek’s
“Sinfonietta,” Jongen’s “Symphonie Concertante,” and
Khachaturian’s Symphony No. 3 (Symphony
Poem) - seemed like it could be comparatively less successful in prompting
similar praises. Then again this is the
CSO – versatile, virtuosic, vigorous. And
daring. So on this occasion, the orchestra brought a particularly adventuresome,
even sassy attitude to the program, imbuing it with surprising dimensionality
and brio.
Joined by 25 brass players of the
Canton-based, internationally prominent Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps, the
orchestra was indeed commanding as it delivered all the no-nonsense martial
fanfares of the Janacek work, along with its gripping variations in moods and
crisp, fast rhythms. The performance set a decidedly loud, infectiously
stirring tone for the evening, aptly billed as “Sound the Trumpets!”
Peter
Richard Conte, the Grand Court Organist of the Wanamaker Organ in Philadelphia,
was the featured guest artist for the Jongen work. I’m somewhat embarrassed to
admit only a slight pre-concert familiarity with what is widely considered the
composer’s most famous composition. So I’m not sure if the organ passages that
were difficult to hear (and there were several) were the result of overpowering
orchestral sonority, or simply a matter of the score calling for the organ to
provide more understated tonal embellishments.
That said, Conte’s playing was nonetheless
extraordinary for its stamina and powerful, sensitive integration of the work’s
kaleidoscopic textures. He was, to be sure, a seemingly inexhaustible orchestra
unto himself. Particularly magical was the otherworldly quality of instrumental
colorings which transpired during the second and third movements – shimmering,
arpeggiated conversations among organ, harp, flute, and woodwinds. The
whispered tranquility of the strings at the end of the third movement was a
mesmerizing calm before the furiously dramatic calls and responses between
organ and orchestra that unfold in the fourth, building to a startling and
spectacular finale.
In the
Khachaturian symphony, Conte played with similarly thrilling muscularity
throughout the sustained, colossal organ solos that drive much of the work. Add
to that the return of the Bluecoats to bolster the brass section, and you have
the makings of a ‘perfect storm’ concert-closer.
But this is a curious and by many accounts
problematic work, at least from a formalist point of view. That might be what
prompted Maestro Gerhardt Zimmermann to prep the packed house with one of the
most hilarious and lengthy introductions to a work I’ve ever heard him impart.
Acknowledging that he was an ex-trumpet player himself, he noted that the
work’s lavish fanfare writing for many extra trumpets made him feel like he was
“in heaven.” He called the work eclectic,
idiosyncratic, and certainly campy. Sharing
that it conjured for him images of Vincent Price at the organ, he further
likened it to cult classics such as “Attack of the Killer Tomatoes,” noting
that some phenomena are so uniquely bad that we somehow come to regard them as
“really great.”
Was
this irony, or just a salty, tongue-in-cheek hint that the work might in fact
be - with its indulgently meandering
structure and relentless, Russian bombast - less than great? Frankly, watching him wield his baton with
unusually savory gusto, I think Zimmermann passionately respected the work, and
genuinely wanted to sway the hearts of even the most strident purists long
enough for them to simply have as much fun with it as he did. Did he succeed?
Suffice to say that in the end, the organ
soared, the brilliant brass rattled the rafters, and a very appreciative
audience responded with their own great and generous noise of adulation.
Photos: (Top) Gerhardt Zimmermann, CSO
Music Director / Peter Richard Conte, organist
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