Following on from my earlier comments, after fhg's observations I can say that Storgards was taking a very mannered, cantabile view of that No.3 finale opening...
And so it continued with 6&7, if at least with slightly better execution - playing a little tighter and more committed, but still tending to fall into the routine, the balance not ideally clear.
Overall Storgards seems to shape Sibelius with a softer, warmer, more songful profile than we might encounter with Vanska, Berglund, or Sanderling etc., with more interest in texture and colour than structure or drama. A fresh interpretation is always welcome - a shame then, that he didn't seem to have convinced the orchestra of his view, leading to the tentative, cool and unconfident delivery already noted. In the 2nd movement of No.6, he was almost micro-conducting, phrase by phrase - this led to some lovely, floating string-playing (true of the finale too) but tended against clarity of line or architecture, in single movements or the piece as a whole. Again, the 7th began strongly, but the trombone-led climaxes were oddly muted, the phrasing soft and rounded, the scherzo sections without much rhythmic contrast.
I think he has interesting ideas about this composer, but seemed unable to get the orchestra to present them consistently. All-in-all, a work-in-progress...
HOMECONCERTHALL to BRIDGEWATER: what was that big crash at the start of No.6?
And so it continued with 6&7, if at least with slightly better execution - playing a little tighter and more committed, but still tending to fall into the routine, the balance not ideally clear.
Overall Storgards seems to shape Sibelius with a softer, warmer, more songful profile than we might encounter with Vanska, Berglund, or Sanderling etc., with more interest in texture and colour than structure or drama. A fresh interpretation is always welcome - a shame then, that he didn't seem to have convinced the orchestra of his view, leading to the tentative, cool and unconfident delivery already noted. In the 2nd movement of No.6, he was almost micro-conducting, phrase by phrase - this led to some lovely, floating string-playing (true of the finale too) but tended against clarity of line or architecture, in single movements or the piece as a whole. Again, the 7th began strongly, but the trombone-led climaxes were oddly muted, the phrasing soft and rounded, the scherzo sections without much rhythmic contrast.
I think he has interesting ideas about this composer, but seemed unable to get the orchestra to present them consistently. All-in-all, a work-in-progress...
HOMECONCERTHALL to BRIDGEWATER: what was that big crash at the start of No.6?
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