From Out of the Wilderness to the Land of Plenty

From Out of the Wilderness to the Land of Plenty

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Holy smokes! Now that the holiday “routine” is finally winding down (getting ahead on my radio shows, visiting and hosting family, and generally being festive to the point I have no idea what day of the week it is), I glance at the calendar and realize that I’ve totally, inadvertently crammed next weekend with concerts. And somehow two of those concerts feature the Barber Violin Concerto – on the same day!

How did it happen? I impulsively acquired a seat to Friday afternoon’s Philadelphia Orchestra concert as part of a package deal for deeply-discounted tickets. Of course, I leaped at those programs that really appealed to me, the ones I regarded as must-see (or hear), and then to fill the quota, I picked the Friday concert.

And what’s not to like? The program includes, beside the lovely and moving Barber concerto (with the excellent Augustin Hadelich as soloist), Mahler’s winning Symphony No. 4, and John Adams’ “Short Ride in a Fast Machine” (John Adams for people who think they don’t like John Adams). Furthermore, Dalia Stasevska will be conducting, and I confess I am a little bit in love with her. (The fact that she’s married to Sibelius’ great-grandson further endears her to me.)

What I had forgotten was that I was already holding a ticket to the New Jersey Symphony, which had also lured me at some point with a 50-percent off sale. So I’ll be hearing the Barber concerto again on Friday night in Princeton, this time with Randall Goosby as the soloist. It was an offer I couldn’t refuse, especially with a program that opens with Sibelius’ “Finlandia” and concludes with my personal favorite of the Tchaikovsky symphonies, the Symphony No. 2.

This Second Symphony, which assimilates Ukrainian folk themes, has always been subtitled, in English-speaking countries anyway, as the “Little Russian,” but world events have precipitated a shift toward identifying it as the “Ukrainian.” (I didn’t mention that Stasevska, who moved to Finland with her family at the age of 5, was born in Kyiv – yet another detail that binds the Friday concerts.) In this instance, the NJS’s music director, Xian Zhang, will conduct at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium.

Then on Saturday evening, I’ll be back at Richardson for a concert of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. Yet another violinist, Bella Hristova, will be the soloist for Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 1. On the second half will be the Symphony No. 1 of Dmitri Shostakovich.

The program will open with a recent work by Portuguese composer Andreia Pinto Carreia. “Ciprés” takes its inspiration from a poem by Federico Garcia Lorca. The structure of the piece is said to be influenced by the poem’s imagery of trees and water. I’ll be interested to see (and hear) what that’s all about. PSO music director Rossen Milanov will conduct.

I’ll give my ears a rest on Sunday. I’m certainly not complaining – it will be great to get back to attending concerts – but you’ll understand, I hope, that it is a bit like emerging from the desert and trying not to drink too fast!

——–

PHOTO: Dalia Stasevska in her Chuck Taylors. She’ll remain in Philadelphia to oversee John Williams’ Tuba Concerto, with the orchestra’s principal tubist Carol Jantsch, January 15-17. You know I’ll be there for that too!


Comments

7 responses to “From Out of the Wilderness to the Land of Plenty”

  1. Anonymous

    Enjoy!

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Caroline Joy Amico I’ll do my best. I finally sent you a note. Hope that you and your family are having a warm, happy, meaningful Christmas — whenever it is you celebrate!

  2. Anonymous

    Your redundant concert programs activated the cockles of my New Year. Best Wishes & Cheers for yours.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      SW Paul Mack The Barber concerto has really picked up steam. I remember hearing it for the first time in concert nearly 40 years ago, and I had a hard time finding a recording of it on CD. Stern was only on LP then. I bought the Silverstein recording on the ProArte label, and it turned out to be a pretty good disc. A little while later, Oliveira’s recording appeared, with Slatkin conducting, on the same CD with Howard Hanson’s “Romantic” Symphony. I was in heaven. Now I can’t even tell you how many times the Barber concerto has been recorded.

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico Barber seems to link song and instruments in a universal voice I crave for our times.

  3. Anonymous

    Wowie! What an inadvertent treat— not often one can get a live opportunity to experience two interpretations of the same piece— and such a piece! Have fun and spill the deets 👍

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Claire Pula Maybe on Sunday or Monday. It’s been quite a day!

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