Storgårds opened each half with a coloristic tone poem, beginning with Musorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain, not the more refined arrangement by Rimsky-Korsakov, familiar from countless Halloween concerts, but the composer's original orchestration -- last played by the NSO under Osmo Vänskä in 2002. Musorgsky had nothing like Rimsky's skills as an orchestrator, but this version is more barbaric, folksy, and rustic (Rimsky and others made the work so cinematic), and Storgårds lashed the piece forward, in spite of struggles in the violins with the masses of notes (and for not always great effect, because of the weakness of the orchestration). Anatoly Lyadov's The Enchanted Lake, op. 62, had not been heard from the NSO since the 1990s: Storgårds led the NSO in a diaphanous performance, giving a sort of Debussy-esque transparency to the work's lush Wagnerian harmonies. David Hardy's cello solos warmed the opening sections, but the work was allowed to seethe gently, when it did stir, providing lots of watercolor washes of pale color.
Gidon Kremer, last heard in this area with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 2005 (and not with the NSO since 1982), gave an odd but still satisfying rendition of Sibelius's ever-present violin concerto. Known for his idiosyncratic interpretative style and outspoken views, Kremer is unlikely to give a performance that does not defy expectations. In spite of some minor technical shortcomings -- Kremer rather consciously used sheet music as he played, and barely scraped his way past some of the more demanding passages, especially the virtuosic codas of the outer movements -- there was much to admire in his Sibelius. Kremer gave a gypsy flavor to some of the themes, adding little slides and unusual tone color, and the sound of his low playing on the G string of his gorgeous and full-throated Amati violin, made in 1641, was vibrant and elemental, at times more like a viola (in a good way, of course). For the most part, Storgårds was sensitive to keeping the orchestral level out of the way of his soloist, allowing them to surge volcanically at one point in the second movement.
Robert Battey, Storgårds at NSO: A mixed performance (Washington Post, October 7) Robert R. Reilly, NSO Succeeds North by Northeast (Ionarts, October 11) |
This concert will be repeated on Saturday night (October 8, 8 PM) and Sunday afternoon (October 9, 3 PM), in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall.
UPDATE:
Charles T. Downey, Concert Review: John Storgårds’s National Symphony Orchestra Debut (The Washingtonian, October 10)
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