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This article was printed from the Music |
| section of the Chico News & Review. | |
| This article may be read online at: | |
| http://www.newsreview.com/issues/chico/2002-09-19/review.asp | |
| Copyright ©2002 Chico Community Publishing, Inc. | |
| Printed on 12/9/2002 10:25:35 AM. |
| Review
Knowing
what to look for
The minimalist Short Ride was a zippy mélange of repetitions and
explosive bursts of energy, beginning with wood blocks and moving through
brasses, woodwinds, percussion and random whistles before getting to the
lower strings, whose syncopated twos (as set against the rest of the
orchestra's threes ) were both a musical and visual treat.
The Violin Concerto is filled with the dense, pushing complexity
of much of Brahms' later work, so much so that it is hard to tell whether
the solo line should be integrated into the whole or set (via tone and
dynamics) against it. As far as the audiences were concerned, however, any
worrying about such issues was totally overwhelmed by soloist Annaliesa
Place's exquisitely accurate and movingly warm playing, her sunny good
looks and her total, often smiling involvement in the work. Gracious and
accomplished, Ms. Place was a hit both nights.
However, the concert's real pièce-de-résistance was the second-half
Petrouchka, by Igor Stravinsky. This incredibly difficult, variously
metered and solo-filled mix of comedy, irony and tragedy was
stunning--filled as it is with remarkable solo bits and a richness of
internal drama matched by only a handful of Western works.
I think the full nature and brilliance of the piece was somewhat lost
on the Chico audience, which clapped respectfully but didn't rise up
cheering as it might have. It is a long piece, and perhaps, after the
already long Brahms, it was simply too much of a good thing. Written as a
ballet, Petrouchka also tells a story, and, although the program
notes summarized its clown-hero's brief, sad life, they didn't give the
audience anything to hold on to or look for--such as the hurdy-gurdy song,
the ballerina's trumpet-accompanied dance and the stomping of a bear that
comes into the story at the end. More specific, what-to-look-for notes
might have made the work more approachable.
The Redding audience was somewhat more appreciative and tended to laugh
or grin at the playful turnabouts in the music itself. But then it was
perhaps a smaller, more select audience, listening in a considerably
superior auditorium (Laxson will never really do for concerts until it has
a complete shell). Clearly, an evening performance would bring out more
Redding listeners, but how to squeeze two evening performances into the
orchestra's already spare schedule I do not know.
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