Photo of composer Steven Mackey by Alice Arnold |
A hazily beautiful quality is sustained through the work’s four movements, allowing it to sail through a myriad of textures. Novel aural combinations of flute and marimba were most magical, while Currie’s periodic musings on instruments beyond the marimba – almglocken, cowbells, Peking opera gong, kick drum, samba whistle, etc. – provided spice. With a style full of detail, Scottish-born Currie performed every note and phrase with care, allowing nothing superfluous. Incidentally, during solo marimba interludes, Maestra Alsop reveled in the moment by exhibiting hints of her side-to-side podium dance. One is keen to experience Mackey’s current project: a violin concerto (to be premiered in St. Louis) for Leila Josefowicz, a violinist Alsop and the BSO captivatingly worked with last season.
Tim Smith, BSO shines in standards and Mackey concerto (Critical Mass, February 8) Mark Mobley, Orchestra tries a different beat (Newark Star-Ledger, February 8) |
This concert repeats tonight (February 8, 8 pm), in Meyerhoff Symphony Hall in Baltimore, and Saturday night (February 9, 8 pm), at Carnegie Hall in Manhattan.
"Strauss’s comedic tone poem Till Eulenspiegel, featured superbly uniform, no-nonsense playing from the BSO."
ReplyDeleteHow ironic. :-)