Last night, on Sky Arts 2, I watched the worst performance of Tchaikovski's Pathetic symphony that I have ever encountered.
Gergiev throwing himself about like a mad dervish, fingers twirling and face distorting.
The Marinski Theatre Orchestra totally out of step, only held together by the more assertive instruments at various places in the score.
The timpanist could not even beat five evenly spaced drum beats in the 2nd movement. What chance had the remainder to maintain rhythmic integrity?
Poor camera work, but at least Gergiev could not be blamed for that.
When I saw the LSO performing Stravinski's Rite Of Spring last year, I had my doubts about the man waving his arms and twirling his fingers on the podium.
Only a top orchestra, familiar over the years with that work, could have got through those changes of rhythm and dynamics so adroitly, whilst completely ignoring the antics of the conductor.
What do others think? Over the course of my own career, I was able to follow the beat of conductors even as eccentric as Rudolf Schwarz and Silvestri, but from the very start, I would have been quite unable to know where to play the first note of the piece in what is a work which is in every professional's repertoire.
I gave up watching "New Tricks" on satellite TV to watch this performance and found myself watching new tricks of a different kind.
Ventilhorn
Gergiev throwing himself about like a mad dervish, fingers twirling and face distorting.
The Marinski Theatre Orchestra totally out of step, only held together by the more assertive instruments at various places in the score.
The timpanist could not even beat five evenly spaced drum beats in the 2nd movement. What chance had the remainder to maintain rhythmic integrity?
Poor camera work, but at least Gergiev could not be blamed for that.
When I saw the LSO performing Stravinski's Rite Of Spring last year, I had my doubts about the man waving his arms and twirling his fingers on the podium.
Only a top orchestra, familiar over the years with that work, could have got through those changes of rhythm and dynamics so adroitly, whilst completely ignoring the antics of the conductor.
What do others think? Over the course of my own career, I was able to follow the beat of conductors even as eccentric as Rudolf Schwarz and Silvestri, but from the very start, I would have been quite unable to know where to play the first note of the piece in what is a work which is in every professional's repertoire.
I gave up watching "New Tricks" on satellite TV to watch this performance and found myself watching new tricks of a different kind.
Ventilhorn
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