A superb concert at the Royal Festival Hall last night.
SCHUBERT Symphony No. 8 'Unfinisahed'
BRITTEN Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings
SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No. 5
The Philharmonia were in top form with Petrenko conducting. The programme began with a dramatic and moving performance of the Unfinished, with some daring pianissimo playing, Vasily is not afraid of tapering away some passages to near silence. I was halfway back in the front stalls, and needed to really concentrate, which is no bad thing.
The evening's highlight for me was the Britten Serenade, with Mark Padmore and Katy Woolley, who has recently been appointed as first horn with the orchestra.Even the most fearsome passages Britten had devised didn't trouble her. This was superb playing.
Mark Padmore gave us a wonderfully varied reading, very dramatic when required, but wonderfully expressive in the hushed passages. He has a bolder tenor voice than other exponents, Bostridge for example, and this strength makes the music really tell.I don't think I've ever heard a better performance of the Lyke Wake Dirge, it was frighteningly real.
After the interval came the Shostakovich. I have had reservations in the past about Petrenko's RLPO recordings, it's as if some subtle element is missing, and to some extent I felt the same last night. I should say straight away that this was wonderful playing which quite rightly got a standing ovation from some members of the audience. I think that what I have missed is a sense of menace.
Petrenko is a 39 year old man who naturally did not experience the threats against the arts in the Soviet era. To me the older generation of musicians always felt this,, and it shows in the work of musicians like Rhozdestvensky and Mavrinsky, and understood by non Russian conductors like Haitink. What we seem to be getting now is a more objective approach which underplays any subtext in the music. It's refreshing, but something has gone in the process. Who knows? I expect that Petrenko will develop over the years. He's a splendid musician, and last night's performance was certainly quite something!
SCHUBERT Symphony No. 8 'Unfinisahed'
BRITTEN Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings
SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No. 5
The Philharmonia were in top form with Petrenko conducting. The programme began with a dramatic and moving performance of the Unfinished, with some daring pianissimo playing, Vasily is not afraid of tapering away some passages to near silence. I was halfway back in the front stalls, and needed to really concentrate, which is no bad thing.
The evening's highlight for me was the Britten Serenade, with Mark Padmore and Katy Woolley, who has recently been appointed as first horn with the orchestra.Even the most fearsome passages Britten had devised didn't trouble her. This was superb playing.
Mark Padmore gave us a wonderfully varied reading, very dramatic when required, but wonderfully expressive in the hushed passages. He has a bolder tenor voice than other exponents, Bostridge for example, and this strength makes the music really tell.I don't think I've ever heard a better performance of the Lyke Wake Dirge, it was frighteningly real.
After the interval came the Shostakovich. I have had reservations in the past about Petrenko's RLPO recordings, it's as if some subtle element is missing, and to some extent I felt the same last night. I should say straight away that this was wonderful playing which quite rightly got a standing ovation from some members of the audience. I think that what I have missed is a sense of menace.
Petrenko is a 39 year old man who naturally did not experience the threats against the arts in the Soviet era. To me the older generation of musicians always felt this,, and it shows in the work of musicians like Rhozdestvensky and Mavrinsky, and understood by non Russian conductors like Haitink. What we seem to be getting now is a more objective approach which underplays any subtext in the music. It's refreshing, but something has gone in the process. Who knows? I expect that Petrenko will develop over the years. He's a splendid musician, and last night's performance was certainly quite something!
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