The Fourth has been the least disastrously badly played and interpreted so far. Which isn't saying a lot. The slow movement really had direction and brooding purpose, even if he succumbed to the current solecism of slowing for the central climax of the descending clarinet over the ostinato. Happily the shape of the theme doesn't permit the Mantovani-esque sliding that disfigured the slow movements of 1 and 2. The scherzo and finale were well shaped, and they all conveyed well the importance of the rogue timpani B at the end of the first movement's development. Too bad about the lost, bewildered intro, which was attempting to channel Furtwangler in 42 but needed better playing to even come close, and the absurd trio.
The Dialogue worked much better in the hall than the previous night's Derive II, which needs harder edges and a greater degree of corporate responsibility (cf the Sinfonietta's performance with Malkki a few years ago) to make its mark. The Dialogue was also mixed with quite marvellous skill by the engineer chaps.
But, oh, the Eroica. The first movement went off OK, albeit without any discernible attack save the air-raid sirens from Berlin 44 breathing down our necks just after the climax of i. What to do with a Funeral March that is in all details of balance, tempo and articulation Siegfried's Funeral Music but with Beethoven's notes? Nothing after that mattered much, though I'm looking forward to hearing a proper, professional band on Sunday. Some of the playing has been truly shocking, even allowing for an interpretation that the best bands in the world would struggle to make any sense of except in so far as it might have occurred to RW as he sat pondering Parsifal in one of his silk-underpant days.
The Dialogue worked much better in the hall than the previous night's Derive II, which needs harder edges and a greater degree of corporate responsibility (cf the Sinfonietta's performance with Malkki a few years ago) to make its mark. The Dialogue was also mixed with quite marvellous skill by the engineer chaps.
But, oh, the Eroica. The first movement went off OK, albeit without any discernible attack save the air-raid sirens from Berlin 44 breathing down our necks just after the climax of i. What to do with a Funeral March that is in all details of balance, tempo and articulation Siegfried's Funeral Music but with Beethoven's notes? Nothing after that mattered much, though I'm looking forward to hearing a proper, professional band on Sunday. Some of the playing has been truly shocking, even allowing for an interpretation that the best bands in the world would struggle to make any sense of except in so far as it might have occurred to RW as he sat pondering Parsifal in one of his silk-underpant days.
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