Tag: Aubree Oliverson

  • Oliverson’s Joyful Dvořák Shines

    Oliverson’s Joyful Dvořák Shines

    I wonder if it’s a truism that when violinist Aubree Oliverson is happy, she plays well. Because on the two occasions I’ve seen her, she’s exuded joy and played very well indeed. Last night, she followed her bliss in the Dvořák Violin Concerto on the first of two concerts presented this weekend by the Princeton Symphony Orchestra.

    Last year, I had a few quibbles about her take on the Tchaikovsky concerto, as I thought it lacked emotional depth, but I can’t deny that it was an exuberant performance. Just not sure that Tchaikovsky is always the most exuberant composer. Melancholy and angst don’t appear to be in Oliverson’s vocabulary. She takes the microphone before a performance and offers a brief, sunny anecdote about her first encounter with the work she’s about to play, and it’s evident from the first note that none of that giddy sense of discovery has waned. (Oliverson is still only in her 20s.) But perhaps in my 50s, I err too far in the other direction.

    Dvořák seems to be a better fit for her. For sure, there is plenty of drama and wistfulness in the piece, but also lots of cheer and abundant charm in its Czech-inflected melodies and rhythms. Performer and music were as one in the buoyant final movement. I wish all good things for Oliverson. At her age, I was already a bitter fellow (though not at the expense of heart and humor).

    Even in her encore, Olivia Marckx’s arrangement of Joseph Kosma’s melancholy standard, “Autumn Leaves,” there was little sense of heartbreak and instead a lot of jazzy playfulness.

    Here’s an Oliverson performance compilation I found on YouTube. You can get a taste of her Dvořák as it’s the third selection. Her playing sells itself. In person, she is a ball of positive energy.

    The second half of the program was devoted to Arnold Schoenberg’s orchestration of Johannes Brahms’ Piano Quartet No. 1 in G minor. The work is more fun if you’re familiar with the Brahms in its original incarnation (which the PSO presented on a chamber music concert on Thursday night). Schoenberg’s impression of Brahms is a bit like Rich Little’s impressions of most people who aren’t George Burns – you chuckle more because you recognize who they’re supposed to be than for their uncanny accuracy.

    But in Schoenberg’s case, I’m not sure that’s even entirely the point. Schoenberg complained once in a letter to critic Alfred Frankenstein that the quartet is “always very badly played,” with the piano frequently overwhelming the strings. (That was not the case on Thursday night.) “I wanted to hear everything – and this I achieved.” So you say, Arnie. But there are times in Schoenberg’s orchestrations of other composers’ music, and not just here, that everything just turns to clotted cream.

    The work is at its most pleasing when it emulates Brahms’ style. I was grateful for the sense of spaciousness achieved in the outer sections of the third movement, for instance, when the strings are allowed to breathe and the woodwinds offer touches of expressive color. At other times, it’s like washing down buttermilk with bock. There were passages when the textures became so claggy that I found myself longing for one of Schoenberg’s auditorium-clearing twelve-tone masterpieces that are at least held on a tighter leash, compellingly-argued at a fraction of the length.

    Furthermore, there is a tendency in parts for his work here to slide into vulgarization. In Schoenberg’s arrangement, the march that emerges from the third movement is not inspiring, as it is in Brahms’ original, but crass, I suppose the way many marches are when played by ceremonial bands. Brahms’ music can be earthy on occasion, but he is never vulgar, not even when incorporating drinking songs into his “Academic Festival Overture.”

    On the other hand, at those moments when Schoenberg really swings for the fences and brings in xylophones and glockenspiels, so that the ersatz gypsy czardases of the work’s final movement take on an almost cartoonish quality, it zings to life. As with Stokowski’s Bach, there’s an undeniable thrill in anticipating how garish and bizarre it will all become.

    Of course, all matters of questionable Schoenbergian taste aside, the orchestra played marvelously, under Rossen Milanov’s assured direction. Milanov has been music director of the PSO since 2009.

    The concert opened with a brief but attractive work by Bulgarian composer Dobrinka Tabakova, “Orpheus’ Comet.” Suggesting the form of a toccata and unfolding in a swirl of orchestral bees (in Virgil’s “Georgics,” Eurydice is pursued by a bee-keeper, prior to the fatal snake-bite that sends her to the underworld), the work is sensitively orchestrated and full of interesting colors. It culminates in a quotation of Monteverdi’s famous fanfare from his opera “L’Orfeo.” Even without the stunt payoff, the piece is a lot of fun, and at five minutes it does not outstay its welcome. Tabakova clearly understands what Schoenberg did not – that brevity is the soul of wit.

    These are just a few of my impressions. You should hear my George Burns. (Say goodnight, Gracie.) You’ll have a chance to draw your own conclusions when the program is repeated at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium this afternoon at 4:00. For more information, visit princetonsymphony.org.

  • Princeton Symphony Brahms & Schoenberg

    Princeton Symphony Brahms & Schoenberg

    To open its 2025-26 season, the Princeton Symphony Orchestra is offering a rare opportunity to experience an established masterpiece from two very different perspectives.

    Johannes Brahms’ Piano Quartet in G minor of 1861 was orchestrated by Arnold Schoenberg in 1937. Brahms was 28 when he wrote it. At the time of its transmogrification, Schoenberg was 63.

    Despite his notorious reputation as the godfather of dodecaphonic music, Schoenberg greatly admired Brahms and indeed would celebrate him, emphasizing his underappreciated genius as a musical adventurer, in a series of 1947 talks titled “Brahms the Progressive.”

    Schoenberg’s reimagining of the piano quartet is warm and affectionate. For most of the work, he manages a pretty good Brahms impression, if not a slavish one. It’s hard to imagine Brahms ladling on the percussion quite like that in the “gypsy rondo” finale. Furthermore, perhaps disorientingly, there is no piano in it. So it’s not Brahms, exactly, but it IS entertaining. Otto Klemperer, who conducted the premiere of the hybrid in Los Angeles, on Brahms’s birthday anniversary, May 7, 1938, paid tribute to Schoenberg’s accomplishment. “You can’t even hear the quartet,” he declared, “so beautiful is the orchestration.”

    Brahms-Schoenberg will make up the second half of this weekend’s Princeton Symphony Orchestra concerts. The program will also include Antonín Dvořák’s Violin Concerto, with soloist Aubree Oliverson, who charmed audiences last year with her performances of the Tchaikovsky concerto. The concerts will open with “Orpheus’ Comet” by Bulgarian composer Dobrinka Tabakova.

    To get the Brahms fresh in our ears and enhance our appreciation of Schoenberg’s achievement, the PSO will present Brahms’ Piano Quartet No. 1 in its original guise on Thursday night, with PSO favorite Natasha Paremski, along with violinist Marc Uys, violist Xandi van Dijk, and cellist John-Henry Crawford. The concert will include commentary by PSO music director Rossen Milanov – who, of course, will also conduct the weekend concerts.

    Brahms’ chamber work will be performed at Trinity Church Princeton, 33 Mercer St., on Thursday at 7 p.m.

    The orchestral program will be presented at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m.

    At another related event, storyteller Maria LoBiondo will refresh our memories of the Orpheus myth, in preparation for our brush with “Orpheus’ Comet,” as she weaves her spell at Princeton Public Library, this Wednesday at 7 p.m. Attendees will have the opportunity to enter a drawing to win free tickets for this weekend’s concerts.

    Don’t look back with regret like Orpheus. For more information, visit princetonsymphony.org.

  • PSO’s Majestic Season Opener

    PSO’s Majestic Season Opener

    The Princeton Symphony Orchestra opened its season on Saturday with majestic Brahms, pollyanna Tchaikovsky, and a new work conjuring the big blue (and Sibelius?) from New Zealand.

    The young American violinist Aubree Oliverson demonstrated that there’s more than one way to skin a masterpiece on the PSO’s opening night at Richardson Auditorium, when she appeared as soloist in Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto.

    By way of introduction, Oliverson took the microphone briefly to share her appreciation of the work, which she said was the first piece she ever heard in concert that made her realize how much she truly loved classical music. She herself played it for the first time with the Utah Symphony Orchestra at the age of 13.

    And what’s not to like? There are big emotions couched in big melodies and some thrilling instrumental pyrotechnics in the first and especially the third movement.

    The violinist’s affection was evident from the start on Saturday. Her unhurried interpretation of the first movement emphasized the sheer beauty of the music over urgency or passion. Oliverson also spoke of the balletic qualities of the work (after all, Tchaikovsky was also the composer of “Swan Lake,” “The Sleeping Beauty,” and “The Nutcracker”), which were easily discerned in certain characteristics of her performance. But the deeper emotions seemed to be lacking.

    Oliverson played the undeniably beautiful music beautifully, with the occasional feint toward wistfulness, but it was mostly the music itself, as opposed to anything in the interpretation, that made it unavoidably poignant. Tchaikovsky crafted it right into the score. The spirit conveyed in Princeton, on the other hand, by and large, was as untroubled as a pleasant breeze on a languid, late summer evening.

    Oliverson was the very embodiment of the joy of music. For much of the piece, she played with a smile on her face, evidently savoring all the felicities of the moment. It might very well have been the happiest Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto ever.

    It is also possible that so much sunshine, while undeniably endearing in the soloist, served to undercut, or at any rate dilute, the nobility of the work. I remember listening to a recording in college with a group of friends – when I was only a few years younger than Oliverson, in fact – and commenting that if I were ever in a position in which I would have to pilot a plane to an emergency landing with the cockpit engulfed in flames, I would want it to be to the grand orchestral statement of the big tune of the opening movement. Of course, this was back in the 20th century, when such an over-the-top, overtly cinematic scenario could still be considered romantic by a someone in his melodramatic teens. There’s a lot of doomed romance in Tchaikovsky.

    The PSO’s music director, Rossen Milanov, proved a generous collaborator, tailoring the orchestra to his soloist, giving her her head while sensitively molding the accompaniment, then whipping his musicians into welcome displays of energy for the tutti passages.

    Unfortunately, Oliverson’s largely relaxed view of the first movement didn’t allow for very much contrast with the second. For me, the lack of differentiation in the emotional temperature affected the balance of Tchaikovsky’s design, making it seem almost like the Bruch or Barber concertos, where you get two meltingly gorgeous slow movements and then a lightning virtuoso finale. Nothing wrong with that, I suppose, if you don’t mind back-to-back tours of the same beautiful scenery. The lurking woodwind soloists did what they could to try to keep things haunted, but given the context they were more like decorative cartoon spiders on a Halloween Carvel cake.

    The third movement follows attacca – without break – and can often jolt an audience with its explosive opening, bursting as it does onto a scene of unusual repose. For whatever reason, that didn’t really happen here. In this instance, the cause, or interpretive choice, might be attributed to conductor and orchestra, rather than the soloist. Oliverson relished the movement’s folk-like elements, though, tossing them off with requisite dash. But whenever the fiddle passages lagged the performance would slip back into languid admiration. The violinist was at her most compelling in the fleeter moments, which, as with everything she played, brought her evident pleasure.

    The highlight came as things really started to heat up finally toward the end, when Oliverson turned on concertmaster Basia Danilow and the rapidly handed off exchanges between soloist and orchestra were transformed into a kind of musical duel. It brought a welcome touch of drama and panache. If only there had been more of that and perhaps some genuine gloom, when appropriate. Perhaps more of it will come as the soloist is ground down by life’s tragedies and disappointments like the rest of us. Great experience for the artist, surely, not that I would wish it on anyone.

    Despite my mixed reception of the performance as a whole, I must say it was gratifying to witness a soloist, still very much in the early part of her career, so unjaded and completely enjoying herself. There may not have been a lot of Byronic introspection, but there were plenty of tiny hearts popping over heads. I’m tempted to describe it as a young person’s interpretation, except when I was her age, I was totally angsty. May she always retain some of that lightness of spirit, so at odds with a cranky middle-aged reviewer shouting at clouds on Facebook!

    The audience responded with a standing ovation and Oliverson was applauded by members of the orchestra.

    I have to commend the soloist, the conductor, and the entire group for going all in and trying something different, and Oliverson in particular for putting her own stamp on it. Personally, I prefer my Tchaikovsky laden with more tragic-heroism.

    Milanov had his chance to exercise full control on the second half of the program, when he took the podium for Brahms’ Symphony No. 4.

    I have a history with this piece, as well, once again going all the way back to my teen years. I remember the first time I heard a recording of Brahms’ Symphony No. 2, which was lent to me by my piano teacher, and I thought it was the greatest thing ever. Then she lent me the Symphony No. 3. During a period in high school, I used to listen to the first movement of the Symphony No. 4 every night before bed. It’s fair to say that in my spring I was already in my autumn.

    Milanov, who conducted without a score, kept the textures lucid, but lost none of the work’s autumnal power, the orchestra most impressively navigating waves of rubato. Either a lot was accomplished in rehearsal or the musicians are just totally in tune with the conductor after a partnership of so many years. (Milanov, who turns 60 this year, is now in his 15th season at the helm.)

    Unlike that for the Tchaikovsky, the Brahms performance was full of variety, with an organic flow of ever-shifting moods and tempi. Yet everything was nicely blended. The horns were equal parts wistfulness and nobility, demonstrating that there was still some sap left in Brahms’ autumn foliage. The woodwinds played gorgeously. There was a seamless flow of tension and release throughout, with some characteristically dramatic timpani work from Jeremy Levine.

    In the second movement the strings exhibited a range of mastery from delicate pizzicato to high-flown aspirational melodies and aching harmonies. Brahms can be so emotional in his reserve. The work glows with nobility and heroism, but of an Apollonian, as opposed to a Dionysian cast. He also knows how to gently muse and intimate good spirits. This kind of subtlety can be tricky to pull off and is perhaps less appreciated by general audiences than the “bigger” moments. There can be a world a difference between his music and that of Tchaikovsky.

    Interestingly the two composers knew one another. They were also born on the same date (Brahms on May 7, 1833, and Tchaikovsky on May 7, 1840). They didn’t care much for one another’s music – Tchaikovsky was particularly hostile, at least at first; Brahms seems to have been just bored (he fell asleep during a performance of Tchaikovsky’s 5th Symphony in the presence of the composer) – but the two managed to warm to one another immensely on the few occasions when they did get to socialize.

    Brahms’ third movement is a rousing, roistering interlude. If you have a fever and the only prescription is more triangle, look no further, with Levine’s timpani also at their most riotous. Early audience satisfaction is guaranteed, and of course there was premature applause.

    The concluding passacaglia lends the work a tragic dimension. But again, it is not a tragedy of teeth-gnashing and hair-tugging, but rather one of inexorable grandeur. The Baroque form lends it a sense of continuity, Brahms cementing his status in the pantheon, even as it puts a stamp of finality on this most autumnal of the composer’s symphonies.

    Yet what lingers in a performance like this is a sense of Brahms’ inner warmth and generosity of spirit in his “twilight years.” For the record, he was 51!

    The concert opened with a brief work by New Zealand composer Gemma Peacocke. Peacocke currently makes her home in Hopewell as she works toward her doctorate at Princeton University. Her orchestral piece “Manta” is steeped in the natural world and Māori lore. Inspired in part by Wiremu Grace’s story “Whaitere,” about an enchanted stingray who visits her parents in the underworld before returning as a kaitiaki, or guardian, of the sea, the work was also influenced by the composer’s observations of these wondrous sea creatures off the coast of her native Aotearoa.

    Even though geographically Finland is half a world away from Oceania, there is something of a Sibelius tradition in the antipodes, as former assistant conductor of the New Jersey Symphony, Gemma New – who was born in Wellington and is now principal conductor of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra – once discussed with me. She pointed out that many Finnish musicians perform there (the NZSO recorded an acclaimed cycle of Sibelius symphonies under its then music director Pietari Inkinen). There’s also a shared kinship with nature. She added that there’s even a similar reserve in the Kiwi disposition. So environmentally and temperamentally, the two cultures are somewhat apposite. Perhaps it partly explains why one of the country’s most famous composers, Douglas Lilburn, is clearly indebted to the Sibelius sound.

    With all this in mind, it’s hardly surprising that the tone colors in Peacocke’s work reflect those of the Nordic master. But is it intentional? Her instrumental choices could also be said to conjure aquatic associations. And why wouldn’t it?

    Joining the PSO were an octet of young musicians (four violinists, two violists, and two cellists) from the Youth Orchestra of Central Jersey, against whom concertmaster Basia Danilow played solo passages. The piece, which at five minutes does not by any means outstay its welcome, ends on an otherworldly pitch bend.

    The program was repeated at Richardson Auditorium on Sunday afternoon. On that occasion, Aubree Oliverson provided an encore to the Tchaikovsky concerto in Mark O’Connor’s “Menuhin Caprice.”

    I hasten to add, I have been unable to find even one other mixed review of a performance by Oliverson anywhere online, so this could very well be yet another case of something just not sitting right with me. Kind of like when I lambasted Esa-Pekka Salonen’s performance last season of Sibelius’ 5th Symphony with the Philadelphia Orchestra. I wish Oliverson nothing but the best in a long and rewarding career.

    For alternative, uniformly laudatory reactions, check out Susan Van Dongen’s thoughts in U.S. 1 and Nancy Plum’s in Town Topics.

    Community News/U.S. 1

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/classical-music-review-princeton-symphony-orchestra/article_46795164-7524-11ef-9bfe-a310986c2127.html

    Town Topics

    Princeton Symphony Orchestra Opens Season with Towering 19th-Century Masterpieces

    The next concerts of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra will be held at Richardson Auditorium on October 19 & 20. On the program will be Michael Abels’ “More Seasons,” Prokofiev’s “Classical Symphony,” and Beethoven’s “Triple Concerto.” For more information, visit princetonsymphony.org.

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