Ravishing Virtuosity and Power
from the Canton Symphony Orchestra
By Tom Wachunas
In his program
comments celebrating the 80th season of the Canton Symphony
Orchestra (CSO), Music Director Gerhardt Zimmermann wrote, “Why do I love
conducting this wonderful orchestra?...The CSO is that rare gem of orchestras
that conductors seek to make music with. Their playing is committed, heartfelt,
powerful, and above all, exciting.”
For the
season-opening concert on October 14, that rare gem dazzled with exceptional
brilliance, beginning with Samuel Barber’s Essay
For Orchestra No. 2, composed in 1942.
It’s a marvelous, single movement work of interwoven, contrasting themes
and developments, and exemplary of Barber’s passionately lyrical aesthetic.
Here the ensemble perfectly captured the work’s changing moods – like painting
an expansive landscape of emotions in sumptuous orchestral colors - with
compelling precision and dramatic sonority. The briefly tranquil opening theme
gave way to darker passages of churning drama and foreboding. Those in turn
transitioned to more light-hearted, pastoral interludes, with melodic counterpoints
that eventually morphed into the majestic and triumphal solemnity of the
explosive conclusion, all clearly thrilling the audience.
Lauren Roth, a former CSO concertmaster and now
concertmaster of the Tucson Symphony Orchestra, returned to Canton to perform Camille
Saint-Saëns’ lavish Concerto No. 3 for Violin and Orchestra. What made this
homecoming all the more exciting was that this was the first time Roth
performed the concerto with an orchestra, though you’d never guess it from her
virtuosic playing, delivered with astonishing fluidity and authority.
Roth’s demeanor was mesmerizing, at once
gently measured and aggressive, evident in both her impassioned facial
expressions and stance. She was communing with not only the ensemble, but also
with her instrument, making it sing in a marvelous range of tonalities, and at
times seeming to demand its submission to the many technical challenges of the
music. Her playing was especially poignant during the second movement, wherein
the graceful violin melody engaged in a delicate dance with the woodwinds.
Throughout the work, she articulated Saint-Saëns’ lush cadenzas – ravishing in
their fast arpeggios and scales, double stops, and flawless ascensions into
incredibly high-pitched harmonics – with stunning bravura.
Respighi’s Fontane di Roma (Fountains of Rome), and
Pini di Roma (Pines of Rome) comprised
the second half of the evening. The orchestrally rich score for the latter work
called for a massive orchestra. Consequently, for this concert, the CSO
ensemble was 92 members strong – a substantially larger group than usual,
providing an unprecedented aural depth to the proceedings.
While the
performance of The Fountains of Rome was utterly
enchanting, it was in the final movement of The
Pines of Rome – “the pines of the Appian Way”- where the orchestra became
an unforgettably unified embodiment, delightful in its unabashed flamboyance,
of the composer’s intent. Respighi described it as the “…unceasing rhythm of
numberless footsteps. A vision of ancient glories appears to the poet’s
fantasy: trumpets blare, and a consular army bursts forth in the brilliance of
the newly-risen sun…”
A low,
rumbling, relentless cadence, suggesting an army on the march, reverberated
through the entire concert hall in ever-loudening layers, enough to rattle
bones and make the heart race. We were engulfed in plangent waves of brassy
martial trudging, augmented by the extra brass players standing in the side
aisles. Maestro Zimmermann was particularly animated, turning this way and
that, like a general rallying his troops. The final jubilant chord was a
piercing blast, raising a collective shout of amazement from the audience. It
was as if all of Roman history had just passed before us in a protracted sonic
boom.
No comments:
Post a Comment