The third orchestral suite (G major, op. 55) has two dance movements at its center, a second-movement waltz that Maazel took at a fleet tempo, more agitated than melancholy. It matched the scherzo third movement, fretful with repeated notes, perhaps too fretful in the trio, a dance of misplaced accents. The playing was rhythmically tight, crisp, athletic, but one could not help thinking of how Tchaikovsky pronounced in his diary during the composition of this music that he was very dissatisfied "because of the banality of everything that comes into my head." To his self-critical question "Am I played out?" this performance, in spite of its virtuosic polish, seemed to answer a resounding Yes.
Anne Midgette, The Philharmonic: Strong but Showy (Washington Post, October 6) Peter Dobrin, New York Philharmonic makes a visit (Philadelphia Inquirer, October 6) Tim Smith, Maazel and New York Philharmonic shine in DC (Clef Notes, October 6) |
The next concert sponsored by WPAS is the all-Beethoven recital by AndrĂ¡s Schiff on Friday night (October 10, 8 pm), in the Music Center at Strathmore.
Snicker. Excellent post-traumatic Tchaikovsky disorder report, Charles!
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Thanks -- I probably should have worn ear plugs.
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