Originally posted by bluestateprommer
View Post
Prom 42: Sibelius, Beethoven and Nielsen (18.08.22)
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Alison View PostNot really on the level of Ben Grosvenor’s unforgettable Fourth last season.
I would recommend last nights Beethoven 1 . That was some performance…
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostHmm. I find this performance has, as it were, grown on me as it has gone along. I like the improvisatory character of pianism.
With Jan Lisiecki as soloist.
I was looking forward to Francesco Piemontesi, as I have admired his work on CD but never heard him live. Sadly, he was unwell but what a welcome replacement!
I know Lisiecki best from his wonderful recording of Schumann’s Concerto. His first entry in tonight’s concerto was individual, fresh and not at all anodyne. It’s promise was fulfilled throughout Beethoven’s marvellous first movement. For a moment, Jan’s sensitive touch reminded me of the first time I heard the work in Bournemouth over seventy years ago with the diminutive, soberly dressed Myra Hess. [My word would she have caused a sensation had she turned up as Bournemouth Beach Belle à la Yuja Wang.]
Beethoven’s Andante con moto, is also breathtakingly original. The piano has to repeatedly answer forceful sentences from the orchestra’s strings until, little by little, the piano’s quiet authority undermines and silences the strings’ resolve. Once the piano has celebrated its victory, the music then runs without pause into the taut Rondo finale, Vivace. Jan shaped this short, idiosyncratic movement beautifully.
The finale was full of life, vitality and fun. The soloist sounded in his element and the orchestra came up trumps. A winning performance.
Encore: Chopin’s dreamy Nocturne in C minor op. posth. was played with sympathy and understanding.Last edited by edashtav; 18-08-22, 20:09.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Alison View PostNot really on the level of Ben Grosvenor’s unforgettable Fourth last season.
Wondered if JL would perform Chopin as his encore, given his recent DG album of Chopin. He did :) , and very well.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostBlimey as last night Thomas D has started before the audience finished clapping - segueing out of Martin Handley’s intro with Radio One like celerity . Wonder whether he is making an artistic point or has a train to catch?
Comment
-
-
Interesting to hear from Martin Handley just before the music started about the placement of the 2nd set of timpani in the Arena for Nielsen 4. This must have made for a terrific effect, sonic, theatrical, and musical, in the timpanists' duel. Had I been in the RAH, I would have Prommed in the Gallery, as close to the back center as possible, so I'm trying to imagine the staging looking down from on high. Like with yesterday, TD guided the orchestra well (the sudden opening over the audience applause aside), but as the quote from Sakari Oramo in the other thread indicates, with Nielsen, the thing to do is to guide the orchestra and not "over-interpret". Whatever my mixed feelings about TD with the BBC SSO, this pair of concerts was, on the whole, a very strong way to end his chief conductorship of the orchestra, finishing with head held high.
While I'm not a fan myself of the "G&T" interval sessions, it occurred to me: this is actually a variation on the FoR3 Christmas Game, in its way. Just a thought.....
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe piano sound on this doesn’t sound right at all . Too distant and bathroomy…..
Ooh - suddenly got better …
Comment
-
Comment