Costume designs and original illustration for Ballets Russes productions of Stravinsky's The Firebird. |
REVIEW
Long Beach Symphony, Terrace Theater, Long Beach
DAVID J BROWN
Mykhailo Verbytsky. |
The other thing the LBSO shared with their colleagues to the south was to maintain in their playing the sense of specialness, of renewed vitality and commitment; in short, that of being grateful to be back after the long drought of live performance in front of audiences due to Covid restrictions—and long may all this continue!
Richard Strauss in 1945, the year he completed the Oboe Concerto. |
It was the last of these that formed the centerpiece of the concert, played by the LBSO’s principal oboist Rong-Huey Liu, and in an informative and amusing conversation beforehand (below) with Music Director Eckart Preu, they sketched in the background to the work as well as discussing its challenges. In addition, Ms. Liu gave an impressive demonstration of circular breathing, the technique woodwind players use to negotiate long continuous phrases with no place to stop and draw breath, and averred that the Strauss was one of the most difficult in the oboe concerto repertoire, the soloist playing almost continuously through its 25-minute length.
Strauss said of his late works that they were modeled on "the divine Mozart at the end of a life full of thankfulness," and the Oboe Concerto certainly has a Mozartean mellifluousness and seeming effortlessness. Nonetheless this account—though impeccably played by Ms. Liu and devotedly accompanied by Maestro Preu and the LBSO, reduced to the handful of winds and strings that Strauss asks for—for me did not reduce the concerto’s elusiveness.
While there was much to enjoy in its fluent beauty and to admire in the total craftsmanship of a master apparently secure within his late revisiting of the eternal verities, once again it somehow left little behind that stuck in the mind.
From the 1876 premiere of Peer Gynt. |
Grieg in 1888, the year the first Peer Gynt Suite was published. |
The concert opened with Suite No. 1, and it was an object lesson in the dividends to be gained from treating what might be regarded as a slight pot-boiler with just as much care and attention to detail as a great symphony. The opening Morning Mood flowed with just the right degree of evanescent freshness, while the muted strings’ Death of Åse was a model of withdrawn tenderness. Unmuted, the strings were joined by just a triangle for the winsomely exotic Anitra’s Dance, and then the Hall of the Mountain King resounded to a precisely calculated stringendo al fine from Preu and the full forces to its crashing fff end.
As for Stravinsky’s Firebird, which formed the second half of the program, the suite drawn from his ballet written for Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in 1909-1910 comprises around half the original score. The composer made his first attempt at assembling a suite in the year following The Firebird’s sensationally successful production, but without much change to the instrumentation.
Igor Stravinsky as drawn by Pablo Picasso, 31 December, 1920. |
Here again the performance excelled, with Maestro Preu’s reading of the score as fluid and elastic in its treatment of dynamics and tempi (even in its truncated suite form The Firebird remains ballet music above all) as it was observant of textual detail—and all faithfully followed by the LBSO players.
Thus, for example, at the very start of the Introduction, played not too slowly, the muted celli and double basses, pianissimo and arco (Stravinsky asks for just two of the latter to play without mutes and pizzicato!) were quiet enough for the accompanying bass drum roll, also pp, to come through clearly even in the Terrace Theater acoustic—a detail that often gets lost.
High woodwinds pranced brilliantly in The Firebird’s Dance and Variation, then drooped languidly as required for The Princesses’ Khorovod; brass crunched and blazed fearsomely in the Infernal Dance of King Kashchei; low strings, harp and bassoon dreamed their haunted dream in the Berceuse, and then the crowning moment came as principal horn Melia Badalian flawlessly executed her challenging high solo entry, Lento maestoso, piano, dolce, cantabile, intoning as from a mountaintop to usher in the Finale. It doesn’t get much better than that.
The penultimate concert in the LBSO's 2021-22 Classical Series at the Terrace Theater will take place on April 30, when Maestro Preu and the orchestra are joined by the guitarist Pepe Romero: more information and ticket availability can be found here.
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Long Beach Symphony Orchestra, Terrace Theater, Long Beach Performing Arts Center, Saturday, March 12, 2022, 8 p.m.
Images: Firebird designs: courtesy Houston Symphony Orchestra; Verbytsky, Strauss, Grieg, Peer Gynt, Stravinsky: Wikimedia Commons; Pre-concert talk: Long Beach Symphony.
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