Rachmaninoff, Piano Concertos 1-4, City of Birmingham Orchestra, N. Lugansky Strauss, Don Juan / Don Quixote, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, D. Barenboim |
While we would have enjoyed the chance to see Muti, who never loses his cool, this is the beginning of a two-week guest visit by another favorite conductor, Charles Dutoit. He was leading works that have a history with this most venerable of American orchestras: the CSO gave the American premiere of Richard Strauss's Don Quixote, op. 35 (not with the composer conducting, although he did conduct the CSO), and they performed Rachmaninoff's third piano concerto with the composer as soloist in 1932. It has been a Strauss-full spring so far, and this Don Quixote was a warm, jocular addition, with character-rich solo performances from CSO principal musicians as soloists, cellist John Sharp and violist Charles Pikler, who recorded the work with Barenboim back in 1991. The orchestra is a beautifully toned and balanced group, making the big tutti moments with Strauss's full orchestration thrilling, particularly the crisp precision of the brass, while some of the woodwind solo moments did not shine as strongly. The discordant bleating of the herd of sheep was particularly vivid, as were the pellucid passages of the love music, which Dutoit allowed to expand and breathe.
John von Rhein, Chicago Symphony Orchestra soloists find the soul of Strauss tone poem (Chicago Tribune, April 6) Lawrence A. Johnson, Lugansky makes triumphant CSO debut with powerhouse Rachmaninoff (Chicago Classical Review, April 6) |
The Cubs and the Nationals finish out their three-game series today and tomorrow (April 7 and 8) at Wrigley Field. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra will repeat this program this evening (April 7, 8 pm) and Tuesday evening (April 10, 7:30 pm), in Chicago's Orchestra Hall.
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