Date: Fri 01-Sep-1995
Date: Fri 01-Sep-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Illustration: C
Location: A-11
Quick Words:
Pops-Tanglewoods-Shaham-Views
Full Text:
Classical Music Views-
The BSO & Chistoph Eschenbach: An Incongruous Combination
(no photo, as usual)
By Vadim Prokharov
The Boston Symphony Orchestra; Christoph Eschenbach, conductor; Gil Shaham,
violin. Tanglewood, Lenox, Mass., August 25.
It is always amazing to listen to (and to watch) how an orchestra changes its
sound and ability to convey a composer's intentions while led by visiting
conductors. They come and go, some staying longer, some shorter. Some produce
an unforgettable impact on the orchestra, while others smother its freedom,
arousing only resistance.
A dozen conductors led the Boston Symphony Orchestra this summer in
Tanglewood. The honor to end the summer season on August 25 fell to Christoph
Eschenbach, the Houston Symphony and Ravinia Festival's music director. The
honor was his. The Boston Symphony, however, did not sound or look honored.
Some conductors think simple: get together good musicians and give them
freedom (of course, organized by a conductor; sort of improvisation staged
before a performance). Not Christoph Eschenbach. His doggedly prolix
gesticulation and old-fashioned dramatism suffocated the musicians. The
orchestra's freedom of expression, the balance of its sound and simply its
togetherness, were overrun by the conductor's pressure.
And if the "overture" to the concert, Phaethon, by American composer
Christopher Rouse (the idea of the piece is drawn from the Greek myth about
Helios and his son Phaethon), managed to withstand the gravity of Mr
Eschenbach's conducting, Max Bruch's Fantasia on Scottish folk melodies for
the violin, with orchestra and harp (with Gil Shaham as soloist) and
Tchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony never took off the ground. As soon as the
orchestra had taxied and tried to acquire the potential energy for the
monolithic soaring, the density of the podium personality's aura would have
the musicians pressed to the ground again.
Mr Eschenbach's hands yelled and yelled unceasingly. His theatrical turns from
the violas to the violins and the right-hand's convulsions (which presumably
stood for vibrato) took all the attention from the compositions. This
theatricality logically turned into unnaturalness of tempos and transitions as
well as the demolition of the dynamic structure.
The Boston Symphony may have succumbed to the conductor's pressure, but not
Gil Shaham. The young violinist displayed the mature synergy of force and
subtlety, triumphing over the conductor's stylistic blunders.
The conductor did not learn from Mr Shaham. In the Tchaikovsky, Mr Eschenbach
turned the composer's suffering into slobbering; the music's dramatism into
melodramatic pseudo-significance. Both did not suit the Boston Symphony at
all.
