El Sistema's most famous product, Gustavo Dudamel, was back at the podium, and he led an assured, broad reading of Richard Strauss' tone poem Eine Alpensinfonie. This was the sort of music a group this large was meant to play, vast in scope and character -- four harps (doubling the two parts, one assumes), twelve horns, organ, wind machine, thunder sheets, and all. It is little surprise that the massive crescendos, the offstage brass fanfares, and the booming storm scene -- communicating the terror of being caught in a thunderstorm while exposed on a mountain randonnée -- were thrilling. Dudamel's challenge with this group is to contain it, to refine their sound, and work remains in those areas. The smaller chamber-sized moments were not always together or in tune, although the odd passages of the score -- the shimmering cascade of the waterfall, the cowbells and bleating herds -- were fun.
Anne Midgette, Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra: All grown up on the Kennedy Center stage (Washington Post, December 6) Tim Smith, The refreshing power of Gustavo Dudamel, Simon Bolivar Symphony (Baltimore Sun, December 6) Andrew Patner, Gustavo Dudamel and the Simon Bolivar orchestra bring vigor and finesse to Symphony Center (Chicago Sun-Times, December 3) Lawrence A. Johnson, Dudamel and Bolivar Orchestra spark an audience frenzy in Chicago (The Classical Review, December 3) |
Hear the performance of the Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra, live at Carnegie Hall, via Internet radio (December 10, 8 pm).
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