In the first movement, marked Allegro con brio, Fliter allowed the pace neither to rush nor to seem even mildly fast, even as she fluttered around the keyboard effortlessly; phrases were carefully shaped with both time and volume. Honeck’s active conducting created a glorious rapport between all musicians -- the warm strings in particular. Minor qualms include coordination issues during a dialogue between Fliter and the dragging winds in the fun third-movement Rondo -- the flute and oboe principals were missed in the first half of the program. The timpanist suffered from a single grossly flat timpani, while exacerbating the problem by using very soft mallets that created a wide, unfocused sound.
Anne Midgette, An Impressive Display of Quiet Strength (Washington Post, March 7) |
The program opened with Webern’s Im Sommerwind, a young tonal work never published in the composer's lifetime. Though a suitable complement to the high-Romantic Strauss on the program, Im Sommerwind tended to lose focus by changing directions every few minutes, seemingly without a destination. Look for new recordings of Fliter after her new exclusive recording contract with EMI Classics.
This concert repeats tonight and Saturday (March 7 and 8, 8 pm), in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall.
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