The London Symphony Orchestra and conductor Antonio Pappano were joined by the mercurial virtuoso Patricia Kopatchinskaja in a brilliant performance Fazil Say's eclectic 1st violin concerto which has enjoyed many repeat performances since its Lucerne premiere in February 2008. Sau is pronounced as in 'Sigh no more, Ladies'.
Kopatchinskaja is the work's dedicatee. The four movement concerto is a successful east-west fusion including Middle Eastern folk music plus prominent parts forTurkish and African percussion. The violinist plays, and probably acts, the part of Scheherazade who depends on telling wondrous tales to ward off certain death. Giving the Concerto four short movements maximised opportunities for variety and meant that strange sonorities didn't outstay their welcome. Say is technically adept but shows no embarrassment when a broad melody suitable for a Musical bubbles into view. The second dance movement had the intensity of a totentanz coupled with the rhythmic vitality of Sensmaya by Silvestre Revueltas. It was succeeded by a theme and variations based on a Turkish folk tune. The finale was decked out with birdsong.
The concert began with Ravel's menacing La valse, written as a devastating memorial to lives and lifestyles destroyed by WWI. The performance was impeccable combining finesse, balance telling use of rubato and sharp chording as WWI bombs exploded, shattering delicate waltzes into shards.
After the interval, Pappano's account of Rachmaninov's Symphonic Dances was sensational with glorious orchestral.playing. It was Sergei's final orchestral work, which, like the Ravel featured a haunted waltz, as well as profound nostalgia and melancholy, with a dramatic finale that speaks of a tussle between life and death.
Kopatchinskaja is the work's dedicatee. The four movement concerto is a successful east-west fusion including Middle Eastern folk music plus prominent parts forTurkish and African percussion. The violinist plays, and probably acts, the part of Scheherazade who depends on telling wondrous tales to ward off certain death. Giving the Concerto four short movements maximised opportunities for variety and meant that strange sonorities didn't outstay their welcome. Say is technically adept but shows no embarrassment when a broad melody suitable for a Musical bubbles into view. The second dance movement had the intensity of a totentanz coupled with the rhythmic vitality of Sensmaya by Silvestre Revueltas. It was succeeded by a theme and variations based on a Turkish folk tune. The finale was decked out with birdsong.
The concert began with Ravel's menacing La valse, written as a devastating memorial to lives and lifestyles destroyed by WWI. The performance was impeccable combining finesse, balance telling use of rubato and sharp chording as WWI bombs exploded, shattering delicate waltzes into shards.
After the interval, Pappano's account of Rachmaninov's Symphonic Dances was sensational with glorious orchestral.playing. It was Sergei's final orchestral work, which, like the Ravel featured a haunted waltz, as well as profound nostalgia and melancholy, with a dramatic finale that speaks of a tussle between life and death.
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