The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra welcomed back Maestro Kazuyoshi Akiyama,
its Conductor Laureate, in a concert celebrating our Central European roots in
music.
The evening began with the Overture to Mozart’s Don Giovanni, K. 527. I had the good fortune last summer to attend
a performance of Don Giovanni at
Prague’s Estates Theatre, where the opera premiered. It was amazing that the
orchestra for that performance was made up of only about 50 to 60 musicians,
but in that acoustically ideal hall in Prague, Mozart’s music never sounded
bigger or more dramatic.
That said, Akiyama’s reading of the famous overture had much to offer,
from its dark and somber opening to the brisk and charming ending. Wanting to
watch the Maestro working from close up, I had asked for seats on Row 3 of the
hall. Under Akiyama’s hands, the music took on a three-dimensional quality, and
orchestra played with great subtlety, elan and style.
Violinist Isabelle Faust joined the orchestra in a scintillating
performance of Bartok’s Violin Concert
No. 2. I had heard Ms. Faust before in a recital of Beethoven violin
sonatas, and it was good to have had an opportunity to hear her as a concerto
soloist. In this concerto, Bartok really exploited (in the best sense of the
word) every facet of the violin’s possibility, from the almost savagely wild,
to the most gentle and cantabile
playing. Faust is a master violinist, in control of every aspect of her
playing, from the rhapsodic opening of the first movement, to the lyrical
middle movement, to the fireworks of the final movement. What was equally
satisfying was Akiyama’s reading of the score, conjuring a lush orchestral
fabric through which the solo violin was able to weave and made the performance
complete. It was truly a collaborative effort between soloist, orchestra and
conductor.
Although not as immediately accessible as the famous New World Symphony, or as charming and tuneful as the eighth
symphony, Antonín Dvořák’s Symphony No. 7
in D minor, Op. 70 is, from a standpoint of musical craftsmanship, a
superior work to its better-known siblings. According to Zubin Mehta, it is one
of the more difficult works in the orchestral repertoire. Akiyama’s reading of
this symphony was astonishing, and had a sense of totality and complete control
from first note to last. In the rather Brahmsian 1st movement, I had
rarely heard the VSO strings sound so lush and rich. The orchestral playing was
especially beautiful in the solemn and tranquil second movement. The
rhythmically tricky third movement was handled with panache by the orchestra,
and in the dramatic final movement, with its blazingly triumphant ending, the
orchestra truly sounded like the great ensemble that it is.
Attending a concert by Maestro Akiyama is like witnessing a lesson in pure
musicianship.
In the last decade or more, every visit by this remarkable musician in has
resulted in memorable performances. I was saddened to read that we won’t have
him in our midst next season. I hope that the management of the orchestra would
get their act together and book him for many appearances in the orchestra’s coming
seasons.
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