Toronto Symphony Orchestra | Tippett: Concerto for Double String Orchestra; Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Main, Okay. 503; R. Strauss: Additionally sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30. Andrew Manze, conductor; Emanuel Ax, piano. January 15, 2025 at Roy Thomson Corridor. Continues January 18 & 19; tickets right here.
From heavenly Mozart to cosmic Strauss through quietly euphoric Tippett — one other impeccable program from the Toronto Symphony. This time we owed the event to the orchestra’s late Conductor Laureate, Sir Andrew Davis, who deliberate it however alas didn’t stay to appreciate it. The baton as an alternative handed to the Baroque violinist-turned-conductor Andrew Manze, who in his opening phrases devoted the live performance to the reminiscence of Sir Andrew, reminding us of his selfless championing of Tippett.
It’s exhausting to see why Tippett’s 1939 Concerto for Double String Orchestra would really need particular advocacy. That is music that bounds off the web page from the very first word, and doesn’t cease stunning and delighting till the final. It is usually a deal with to look at. Reduce in half and seated stereophonically, the TSO strings resembled the musical equal of the Home of Commons, with Manze’s florid enthusiasm qualifying him for the function of an interventionist Speaker. To see and listen to the double basses on both facet of the platform bouncing concepts off one another was only one amongst many treats.
With its invigorating rhythmic vitality and drive, the Concerto can also be proof that counterpoint may be enjoyable. The programme notes prompt Jung and T.S. Eliot as mental godfathers. However, their enter is secondary to the heat and humanity that suffuses all of Tippett’s music, nowhere extra so than within the Concerto’s poignant second motion. With its fondly recollected folks tunes and subtly positioned dissonances, that is English pastoralism at its most inspiring, free from the slightest trace of sentimentality or self-indulgence.
Second Half: Strauss & Ax
Jungian dualities had been echoed in Strauss’s Nietzsche-based, man-versus-nature Additionally Sprach Zarathustra within the second half. That is the piece hijacked by Stanley Kubrick in one of the vital efficient cinematographic appropriations of pre-composed classical music. Kubrick lowered your complete 32-minute tone poem to its opening dawn theme. So, it wasn’t stunning to listen to smatterings of applause within the flawed place (after the mid-way return of that theme). Nor was it sudden that Strauss’s quietly ambivalent ending ought to have met with a considerably subdued viewers response.
The efficiency deserved higher. If the well-known opening felt a bit underwhelming, that’s partly as a result of Manze was sticking near the rating. These three ascending trumpet notes are marked pianissimo, with no crescendo. Manze adhered to that and to the only forte for the next accented chords. Viscerally, then, this was no match for Karajan’s 1973 definitive recording (not the mock 1959 one used for the movie), and Manze might definitely have been extra spacious with the remainder of the introduction. Elsewhere, although, his fluid pacing helped transfer the work’s narrative easily ahead. Solos, notably the violin within the Dance-Music episode, had been assured and idiomatic, showcasing the orchestra’s high quality as successfully as any of the concertos for orchestra which can be a working theme of the season.
The prize for probably the most magical orchestral solo of the night, nevertheless, ought to be shared between the flute and oboe within the finale of Mozart’s C main Piano Concerto, K503. Pianists could come and pianists could go, to paraphrase Simon and Garfunkel. In right now’s world of younger and flashy stardom, to be within the presence of a seasoned grasp with such self-effacing appeal as Emanuel Ax — longtime accomplice of the TSO; and certainly of Sir Andrew Davis — is a deal with and a half.
Ax’s tone was heat and rounded, but on the identical time mild and clear, and his phrasing was a masterclass in seamless move and refined nuance. Nothing was exaggerated or mannered. Reasonably, every of Mozart’s ingenious rhythmic, polyphonic, and harmonic adventures was subtly acknowledged, with Manze and the TSO in shut, empathetic attendance, all the way in which to that impressed change between piano, flute and oboe — as breathtaking as any of the ensemble scenes in Mozart’s operas.
It was touching to see Ax’s discreet fist-bump in direction of the woodwinds as he returned to the platform to obtain his simply acclaim. His brief eulogy for Sir Andrew and a chic rendition of Schumann’s Arabesque as encore rounded off a very transferring commemoration of the orchestra’s late Music Director.
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