Showing posts with label Ludwig van Beethoven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ludwig van Beethoven. Show all posts

Monday, January 29, 2024

Love fest at the National Symphony


Seong-Jin Cho takes his seat to begin Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major, Op. 58/By Patricia Leslie, Jan. 26, 2024

The Kennedy Center was hopping Friday night with Chinese dance and music in the Opera House, tick, tick ...BOOM! at the Eisenhower Theater, the National Symphony Orchestra at the Concert Hall and plenty of ushers to smile, greet us, and answer questions like, "which way to the opera?" "The Symphony?"

At the Concert Hall, I was fortunate in my wretched seat (first tier, against the wall's perimeter) to be caddy-corner from a fellow on the row in front of me whose head bobbed up and down, like maestro Gianandrea Noseda's baton, affording me a milli-second glimpse every so often of the guest pianist Seong-Jin Cho playing Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major, Op. 58.

Seong-Jin Cho returns to the stage again and a standing ovation, followed by conductor Noseda/By Patricia Leslie, Jan. 26, 2024


Before Cho finished Beethoven, the head of the man in front of me at last settled at a right angle and did not move until roused by the applause at the end which afforded me a long-awaited few moments of actual sighting of Mr. Cho whose fingers naturally were obscured from my view and hidden by the piano.

The piece thrilled the sold-out crowd, calling Mr. Cho back for five (or six? I lost count) returns to the stage where, at last, he sat down for one more time to play a bit of, was it Mozart?

It was a dreadful seat I had.

Once at Strathmore for the Baltimore Symphony, when I had one of those seats high up against the wall on the perimeter of the hall, I asked for another seat at intermission and got one! (This has worked for me every time on Broadway when two-ton Harry sits in front of you and your view is hidden. I tell you stage managers do a very good job!)

I had waited until the last minute to buy a ticket for the National Symphony and there were few tickets left. My fault.

My dreadful seat ($45.71) allowed me to see half the stage, smashed up against the wall, but, after all, we go for the sound, right? and not the visuals, but seeing is believing and sights do help!

You know the seats: The ones you spot when you look up from the orchestra level and are always thankful it's them and not you sitting up there, only able to see half the stage.

All three of the pieces on the program were huge hits and it was hard to judge which was the crowd favorite, but let me just say, they all were.

I went for the Shostakovich.

Conductor Noseda and composer-in-residence Carlos Simon at the conclusion of Simon's Wake Up!/By Patricia Leslie, Jan. 26, 2024


Conductor Noseda and composer-in-residence Carlos Simon bow their heads to receive the audience's applause at the conclusion of Simon's Wake Up!/By Patricia Leslie, Jan. 26, 2024

The evening began with the stirring Wake Up!, a NSO co-commission and the NSO premiere with the composer-in-residence, Carlos Simon, on hand to receive ongoing applause from the wildly enthusiastic audience. Mr. Cho followed before intermission.

Conductor Gianandrea Noseda recognizes members of the National Symphony at  the conclusion of Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony/By Patricia Leslie, Jan. 26, 2024

But, truly, truly, I say unto you that the Washington, D.C. Symphony audience is madly in love with conductor Gianandrea Noseda who seems to sincerely enjoy the accolades thrust upon him and who wouldn't?

He was awarded with nonstop standing ovations and applause which drew him back three times to the stage after he finished Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony which the orchestra pounded out in militaristic style. (Take that, Stalin and Putin!)

Although the QR code was available for a digital-ugh-program, the ushers upstairs distributed printed programs to the welcoming crowd. (Thank you very much, ushers! Maybe I should not complain so much about upper-level seating where we can get printed - mon Dieu! - programs!)

What a night it was!

More! More! Please play and program more like last weekend!

Rock on, National Symphony!

Next up: The National Symphony Orchestra with Audra McDonald, Jan. 30 and Jan. 31, 8 p.m., Kennedy Center

The view from Tier I while standing/By Patricia Leslie, Jan. 26, 2024


patricialesli@gmail.com







Monday, December 3, 2018

National Philharmonic gifts for the hard-to-please

Hanbing Jia and Sara Matayoshi, violinists for the National Philharmonic Chamber Players/Photo by Patricia Leslie

For the person or persons on your list who is hard to please, who may "have everything," what about a gift subscription to the National Philharmonic at Strathmore

Some music lovers in Northern Virginia are hesitant about going out to Strathmore, but there is no difficulty, I can assure you, as a frequent customer who finds the Old Georgetown Road exit off the Beltway with a right turn on Grosvenor Lane the easier route, but there is also the Rockville Pike/Tuckerman Lane exit, too. 

Strathmore has plentiful free parking at the Metro station garage across the street with an elevated, covered walkway to connect to the music center.

One of the joys of the Philharmonic is its chamber music series where I was able to hear another tribute to Leonard Bernstein's 100th birthday celebration when chamber players performed "What is a Melody?" at the John Kendall Recital Hall at Potter Violins in Takoma Park. 

The program opened with a short video devoted to Mr. Bernstein who defined melody as repeating ideas in a simply arranged method, such as birds flying together or the sound of humming bees (if live bees are a possibility). 

Two masterpieces by Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827), String Quartet in B Flat Major OP. 18 and Grosse Fuge for String Quartet OP. 133 began and ended the program, exquisitely performed by Hanbing Jia and Sara Matayoshi on violins, Lori Barnet on cello, and Colin Sorgi played the viola and directed. 

The first movement in B Flat Major started cheerily with an energetic answer to the cello and violins, while the viola seemed content to linger in the background. The violins played in tandem with an emphatic end to the movement. 

A strong cello led the second movement with more repetition and energy to introduce the third movement whose mazurka similarities and a demanding violin solo all ending happily enough with the fourth.

Next came Blueprint by Caroline Shaw (b. 1982), a Pulitzer Prize winner whose creation linked to Beethoven's String Quartet.

Exclaimed Director Sorgi: "It really is fun and we hope you enjoy it," and the audience did.  It is delightful to hear new compositions, the variations in the outcome, and a millennial's perspective.

In program notes, Ms. Shaw wrote the basis for the work originated as "a harmonic reduction" of Beethoven's String Quartet Op. 18 which she has played many times with friends. "Chamber music is ultimately about conversation without words," she noted.

As in dialogue with friends, there are pauses here, too, but it is a contemporary work which is unobnoxiously modern for this traditionalist (and definitely beyond "millennialism").

Because I am a huge fan of Russian history and culture, the inclusion of String Quartet no. 3 by the Russian Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998) was of keen interest and presented no disappointment despite its stylish sway.
Reginald Gray, (1930-2013), Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998), 1972/Wikimedia Commons

A modern piece by a modern composer with a tense spirit, unpleasant and uncompromising, with hints of Alfred Hitchcock here and there.  A sadness and gloom seemed to permeate the structure in which the composer included attention to Orlande de Lassus, Beethoven's Grosse Fugue, and Dmitri Shostakovich.

Mr. Schnittke composed symphonies, operas, ballets, concertos, and scores for more than 60 films (any of Hitch's?). He is buried in the renowned Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.
Alfred Schnittke's gravestone with fermata, Novodevichy Cemetery, Moscow/Photo by de Bernutzer: Wwwrathert, Wikimedia Commons

The last selection, Beethoven's Grosse Fugue, was labeled "surely one of the composer's most inspiring achievements" in program notes by Mark Steinberg from Yale's School of Music and a member of the Brentano String Quartet. Certainly, another one which the chamber players performed with precision and flair.

Upcoming dates for the Chamber Players at Potter Violins are:

Feb. 3, 2019: The Road to Paris

Apr. 28, 2019:  Musical Atoms
  
The entire orchestra will perform Holiday Pops, December 7, at 7:30 p.m. at Strathmore.


patricialesli@gmail.com