Callow, Hough, LPO, Vänskä, RFH | reviews, news & interviews
Callow, Hough, LPO, Vänskä, RFH
Callow, Hough, LPO, Vänskä, RFH
Rainbow colours in Sibelius's masterly incidental music for 'The Tempest'
2015, Sibelius anniversary year, yielded no London performances of the composer's last masterpiece, the Prospero's farewell of his incidental music to The Tempest.
Previous "editions" from Neeme Järvi and John Storgårds gave us more of the play, the last with an abridged version brilliantly realised by students of the Guildhall School, but both conductors stuck to the music as reconformed and reorchestrated in the two orchestral suites. Last night it was fascinating to hear Ariel's otherworldly flute invocation within the oak tree supported only by harp and violins, for instance, or the violent music for Antonio, the polonaise-exit of the reunited Milanese and the haunting epilogue added for a Finnish production in 1927, none of which appears in the suites.
We also had all four of Ariel's songs delivered in Finnish by mezzo (yes, mezzo for this island spirit) Lilli Paasikivi. It would have been helpful if Callow had given us the Shakespearean originals before each one, and if Vänskä (pictured above with members of the LPO last night by Amy T Zielinski), engaging larger forces than would have been used in the theatre (shame not to have a harmonium), had kept the ensemble down in the first two. Balances weren't always perfect within the orchestra, either, but the Finnish conductor's painstaking detail – which can sometimes rob Sibelius of his seeming naturalness – paid off in some necessary nuancing. His sequence gave the best concert-hall argument yet for Sibelius's genius at characterising Shakespeare's diverse dramatis personae, making this as much an opera for orchestra as Prokofiev's complete score for Romeo and Juliet. Whatever its hybrid roots, it's a total masterpiece, which would be hard to claim for Adès' overrated, if fitfully inspired, operatic Tempest.
Earlier Dvořák's sometimes puzzling Piano Concerto found Stephen Hough (pictured left by Sim Cannety-Clark) impersonating Ariel rather more successfully than Caliban or Prospero. All three are really necessary for a complete picture. I've always found Hough a bit overstretched in the big concertos by Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninov – everything's there, but the virtuosity feels effortful, and there was sometimes a feeling of "Thank goodness I've got through that bit" about Dvořák's more grandiloquent gestures.
Where Hough scored was in seeming to improvise music that would otherwise leave us unsure of where Dvořák is going in this relatively early (1876) piece. That accounted for the first-movement cadenza and the whole of the slow movement, deliciously whimsical. This was, moreover, the best of on-the-ball partnerships with Vänskä and the LPO players, supremely vigilant and very persuasive in the outer-movement themes, authentically Dvořákian in colour – the cellos at the start – and in the dance rhythms. For an encore, Hough gave us rather more familiar Dvořák in the shape of "Songs My Mother Taught Me", effortlessly and delicately embroidered by the pianist in the style of the bonnes bouches with which he sealed his very original arrival as a front-runner on "The Piano Album" 28 years ago.
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Comments
David Nice is wrong. The
David Nice is wrong. The complete music to The Tempest by Sibelius was played at the Proms on 15 August 2007, soloists, chorus, every number, the lot! It's a fantastic score, and far better than the suites.
Missed that one, for some
Missed that one, for some reason: I asked for intelligence and you gave it. First paragraph readjusted accordingly. Have been revisiting the BIS recording of the original and, yes, we do need every number as composed for Copenhagen (and the epilogue for Helsinki) this anniversary year. No sign of that happening under the aegis of Shakespeare 400, but there's still time in the rest of the year.
Cumulatively, yes, the entire incidental music is strongest. But I can't agree that the original score in many numbers is 'far better than the suites' - actually the reverse, there's more instrumental magic in the concert-hall music and the joins are mostly very skilful.