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              SEEN 
              AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW 
              
              Mozart,
              Dorman, 
              Ravel, Martin Grubinger 
              (percussion), Munich Philharmonic, Juraj Valcuha (conductor), 
              Philharmonie at the Gasteig, Munich  24.1.2008 (JFL) 
               
               
               
              The Israeli-American Avner Dorman, born in 1975, was only known to 
              me through a Naxos release of his piano music that I found “damn 
              good” two years ago. Last season his “Variations Without a 
              Theme” were premiered with the Nashville Orchestra (conducted by 
              the secretly-superb Asher Fisch). “Frozen in Time” was 
              commissioned by the young Austrian percussion wizard
              
              Martin Grubinger who premiered the work just two months ago in 
              Hamburg and also now presented it in 
               
              
              
              
              Mozart, Overture to Le Nozze di Figaro, KV 492
              
              
              Dorman, ”Frozen in Time” – Concerto for Percussion and 
              Orchestra
              Ravel, ”Daphnis et Chloé” – Fragments Symphoniques (1st and 
              2nd Suite)
              
              
              
              Juraj Valcuha
              
              Following hot on the heels of 
              
              
              James MacMillan’s conducting his own “Vigil”, 
              this would have been a fine opportunity to get repeat exposure to 
              one of the most important of the reasonably accessible yet 
              uncompromising composers of our time. It would also have fitted 
              nicely into the laudable effort by the Munich Philharmonic to give 
              its very ‘central European’ audience the opportunity to experience 
              Anglophone classical music on a regular basis this season: next to 
              said (and the planned) MacMillan also the Violin Concerto and War 
              Requiem of Benjamin Britten and – just last week – Thomas Adès’ “Asyla”.
              
              
              Alas, it was Nott to be, and with the young Slovakian conductor
              
              Juraj Valcuha (US debut in 2007 with the Pittsburgh Symphony 
              Orchestra) replacing the Britt, the program changed entirely. 
              Mozart’s overture to “Le Nozze di Figaro” was now followed by 
              Avner Dorman’s percussion concerto “Frozen in Time” and Maurice 
              Ravel’s “Daphnis et Chloé” replaced
              
              the biting, yet lithe, Shostakovich symphony so full of odd 
              humor, bitterness, and resignation. 
              
              I cannot be blamed for initial disappointment, made worse by my 
              lamentable deficiency of finding Ravel’s piece – whether it's 
              
              the whole thing or the two suites 
              as performed here (without the chorus) – anything more than mildly 
              enjoyable, usually boring. It’s an oddly evocative, subdued, and 
              misty piece dotted with martial bursts of vigor and joy, and it 
              can splendidly show off an orchestra’s ability for color. But 
              played with  anything less than total commitment I find it a 
              damp squib. Sure enough it was well performed here, sometimes even 
              loud, but it suffered – in a term of Jay Nordlinger's – from the 
              quality of “okayness”. Musical wallpaper of the finest quality.
              
              
              (Daphnis et Chloé was of course conceived as a 'soundtrack' 
              to one of Serge Diaghilev’s “Ballets russes” which are responsible 
              for so many of today’s well known classical hits - and some less 
              known ones.)
              
              The Mozart overture was engaged and explosive, as if the lessons 
              that the orchestra took to heart from Thomas Hengelbrock the month 
              before (Mozart and Schumann with Ramón Vargas) were still present. 
              The real firecracker – and one that went off in all directions – 
              was the Dorman Percussion Concerto. Just as how there was a 
              once a time where every avant-garde composer felt compelled to 
              write a piece for solo flute, there is now a worrisome influx of 
              percussion concertos from modern – usually tonal – composers. Even 
              orchestral pieces without the appropriate warning label are often 
              completely taken over by percussion batteries hammering away at 
              will, it seems.  Fortunately, this was a positive exception 
              to the syndrome of extra bongos making up for lack of inspiration.
              
              
              
              
              Martin Grubinger
              
              
              
              Grubinger was the very image of a little boy who, with unbridled 
              joy and enthusiasm, red cheeks and a shock of obstinate blond 
              hair, got to work on the noise-toy that had been built around him 
              on all four sides like a little play castle. In three movements he 
              charmed the dead-serious audience into appreciating and enjoying 
              the humor and exhilaration of the concerto. “Indoafrica”, the 
              first movement, is dominated by wooden sounds and organic shapes, 
              and emphasized the marimba skills of Grubinger, the youngest 
              finalist of the 2nd World Marimba Competition in Okaya (thewinner 
              was MSU professor Gwendolyn Burgett Thrasher). 
              
              “Eurasia” is of a northern, metallic character. Extraordinary 
              delicate and melodic moments, downright pretty (Mozart, by the 
              composer’s own admission, never far away), and making much use of 
              small Tibetan bells. Meditative parts with a prominent solo violin 
              and more metallic plink dominate. The mechanical character of “The 
              Americas” moves away from the multi-cultural ethnic and maybe 
              ancient sounds that may well be “frozen in time” and arrives 
              straight in the urban landscapes of America. Those who wish can 
              hear tango and Afro-Cuban Jazz here – I heard reminders of Antheil 
              and Varèse. 
              
              A stunning virtuoso feast of an encore (a work for a
              
              Pinzgau drum by Grubinger himself) had the audience in 
              ecstasy: drums, percussion – when well done – appeal to something 
              deep within us - even within the most fun-and-joy-resistant 
              European concertgoer. The inner aversion to all things frivolous 
              caves before aboriginal, deep-seated responses to rhythm.  So 
              they did, here.
              
              
              
              
              Jens F. Laurson
              
              
              
              Photos © 
              
              Juraj Valcuha and
              
              
              Martin Grubinger
              
               
              
              
              
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