mon 25/11/2024

Prom 54 review: Kavakos, Filarmonica della Scala, Chailly - cool Milanesi mute Roman exuberance | reviews, news & interviews

Prom 54 review: Kavakos, Filarmonica della Scala, Chailly - cool Milanesi mute Roman exuberance

Prom 54 review: Kavakos, Filarmonica della Scala, Chailly - cool Milanesi mute Roman exuberance

Bumpy Brahms and finely coloured but reserved Respighi

Chailly: coolly beautiful RespighiAll images by Chris Christodoulou/BBC

Last night was one of those rare occasions when I'd rather have heard Respighi's gaudy-brilliant Roman Festivals than Brahms's Violin Concerto.

It wasn't just that concerts like Charles Dutoit's 2014 Prom had shown us that the Italian's Roman trilogy can actually work as a sequence when Riccardo Chailly was offering us only two of the three. Leonidas Kavakos simply didn't have the consistency to thread the lyrical with the virtuosic aspects and say something new about the Brahms staple, and he was surprisingly subdued at times. But then so was the orchestra in the tone-poems, beautiful of timbre but reserved in all but the last of Respighi's explosions of colour.

Neither Chailly nor his Milanesi seemed willing to go with the special atmosphere of the Proms: what, no encore from a major visiting orchestra? After the big showpieces, Nino Rota or Verdi ballet music would have been so welcome. Yes, this team is Italian, but from the relatively chilly north. Its sophistication was obvious from the first orchestral phrases of the Brahms, dark colours beautifully blended; and when collective violins took up the great melodies and soared, they only pointed up what was missing in Kavakos's playing (the soloist pictured below).Leonidas KavakosHe came to life in virtuoso double-stopping; but what happened to the many cantabile passages? From where I was sitting, they sounded flat and tense, with none of the generosity and special imagination Nikolaj Znaider brought to every phrase in a magnificent Prom with Fabio Luisi and the Danish National Symphony Orchestra two years ago. From the start, there was a sense of pushing forward too much, at odds with the orchestra, even though Chailly was always there to follow him. The biggest misalliance came in the Adagio, where the melody so ineffably sung by the Scala oboist - I hesitate to say which, since two principals were listed in the programme - got bumped about in Kavakos's version. This usually great player is capable of more.

The continuity with which Chailly swept from Brahms's slow movement into the finale found the opening water-music in Fountains of Rome meandering unobtrusively through the chatter of a noisy Proms audience: refreshment currently lacking in the Italian capital now that Lake Bracciano is at an all-time low and the fountains have been switched off. Respighi's more than just picture-postcard depiction of Roman dawn and sunset can rarely have sounded more layered or exquisite. But we needed more of a Triton-blast from the horns in the second picture, and the Trevi procession stayed light and swift.Chailly and the Filarmonica della ScalaWould Chailly unleash more in Pines of Rome? Still not enough in the chatter and songs of ragazzi in the Villa Borghese; nor was the contrast of catacomb mystery as magical as Stéphane Denève and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra had made it in another unforgettable past Prom. But the distant solo trumpet, perfectly vibratoed, sounded supremely exquisite, and so, too, were the wind solos on the Janiculum, not to be outdone by the recorded nightingale rippling round the hall.

Never mind that we didn't get six saxhorns for the extra cohorts of the Roman army processing down the Appian Way; the standard brass ensemble on high still delivered the necessary frisson. With its organ pedals and its ensembles threatening to overwhelm most venues, the military denouement of Pines is as much a Proms institution as Holst's The Planets. If only there had been more thrills throughout this concert - and Prommers should not forgive the lack of an encore (recent light shed on a late arrival and rehearsal - see comments below - suggest a more forgiving spirit, but still doesn't entirely explain the lack). For an orchestra from abroad to refuse it is seriously to misjudge the spirit of place.

Comments

Had something happened that made them pushed for time? We were surprised gthough fascinated) to be let in, half an hour later than usual, to find the orchestra still rehearsing and Kavakos had only just arrived. The rehearsal continued until about ten minutes before the concert was due to start, it started in fact about 20 minutes late - I wondered if that was why we lost our encore (none from the soloist either). It all felt as though everyone was under some unexplained pressure.

Yes. They were very pushed for time. The writer of the article failed to remember that the concert started a half hour later. The reason being that the orchestras instruments were held up at Stansted, by customs , for 2 1/2 hours. It took the orchestra nearly 3to get from Stansted to Kensington. Hence, the rehearsal started an hour and half late, and from that, straight into the concert. Hence the ' bumpy start'. I think that this journalist should now rewrite his article taking these factors into consideration. Of course they had an encore prepared, but no time to do it because there was another concert waiting to start. A great shame. I welcome any replies

As a member of the audience, I was unaware of any of this until someone told me about it this evening (radio listeners had apparently been informed). The concert started on time, not half an hour later, so nothing seemed amiss. Unless an announcement is made at a concert, the duty is to report how the performance works, taken at face value. And since there was no delay in the performance itself, that wouldn't explain the absence of an encore from either soloist or orchestra.

On the issue of a late arrival, an orchestra - indeed, in my opinion, all performers collectively or individually - should not be expected to play on the same day as the flight. Part of the overpacked tour schedules which I'm afraid must be blamed squarely on managers/agents.

I was there in the arena and the concert certainly started late - but by 10-15 minutes rather than half an hour. Delayed enough however to explain the absence of encores. Perhaps it wasn't surprising that there was a certain stiffness in the concerto to start with - but I thought it built up to a remarkable intensity and focus in the first movement cadenza, and from then on I was hooked.

Odd - I noticed no delay, which suggests it could only have been a matter of minutes. No-one was shifting or muttering around me. Anyway, glad you enjoyed the Brahms more than I did.

I was sitting behind the orchestra and they had the score of the overture to La Forza del Destino open on their stands, but no doubt the delay to the concert determined that they never played it. I was disappointed, especially I had already guessed that that was what they were going to play!

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