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              AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
               
              
              Adés,
              Haydn, Munich 
              Philharmonic, Markus Stenz (conductor), Philharmonie at the 
              Gasteig, Munich  30. 1.2008 (JFL)
              
              
              
              Thomas Adés, ”Asyla” for large orchestra, op.17 (1997)
              
              
              Haydn, Symphonies Nos. 22 in E♭ 
              (”Philosopher”) and 100 in G (”Military”)
              
              
              
              
              On January 30th, the Munich audience was exposed to 
              Thomas Adés’ Asyla for the very first time. The work should 
              have been of more immediate appeal to the younger generation that 
              was to be expected at the next day’s Young People’s Concert (same 
              program) – but for the stubbornly conservative audience in 
              Subscription cycle A, Adés’ work was difficultly digested fare.
              
              The music director of the Cologne Opera and the Gürzenich 
              Orchestra Markus Stenz did the only right thing in introducing 
              Asyla to the united, gray, front of house skeptics who noticed 
              with some suspicion from the program notes that the composer of 
              the work in question was not yet dead. Stenz described the work – 
              and he did so with pleasant, sly humor, lowering the audience’s 
              guard. Wisely he didn’t pretend that Asyla was necessarily 
              going to be loved, and instead calmly pointed out that it might 
              take some effort to appreciate it. He expressed his hope and 
              recommendation that the audience enjoy it – which he, to much 
              chuckling, accompanied with gestures that said: “…of sorts, 
              …maybe, …I guess – or not, we’ll see”. (Only describing the third 
              movement [after the rambunctious first, and the short lamento 
              of the second] as “the best way of turning the Philharmonic hall 
              into a techno club” was answered with anticipating groans.)
              
              He may not have won all, or even the majority of ears over (rather 
              an impossible task with a crowd ready to walk out on
              
              MacMillan and even
              
              Shostakovich) but he did much to open minds to the 
              possibility of gaining from the exposure to Asyla, a 
              work so aptly and ambivalently named to mean both, refuge/safe 
              haven and insane asyla (the modern day plural of which is more 
              commonly given as “asylums”).
              
              That third movement, with its stuttering, energy-accumulating, 
              headshaking, bemused, and quiet ways has a notion of dancing 
              itself to total exhaustion  (Le Sacre is calling!) 
              When it enters the felt fourth and last movement (which appeals 
              with a beauty that is somehow askew) there truly is a refuge-like 
              feeling. It is a piece that naturally benefits from live 
              performance (Simon 
              Rattle’s recording is the only comparison) and it was by all 
              accounts played well and with commitment and finally met with very 
              polite applause. 
              
              For Haydn’s Symphony No.22 – “The Philosopher” – half the 
              orchestra got to go home early. (I should have liked to hear No.21 
              – a darling symphony - even more, but it suffers greatly from its 
              lack of a nickname.) The first movement horn and cor anglais 
              parts were played from opposite sides of the orchestra, swapping 
              back and forth their very civil arguments. The whole thing had a 
              somewhat heavy, - with some good will you might say: a generous 
              and full - sound.  
              
              
              Like the more famous “Military” Symphony, No.100, it was full of 
              energy and engagement that was no less impressive than the 
              all-Mozart concert under Thomas Hengelbrock just a few months 
              earlier. Explosive and dainty in turns, flutes chirping and 
              timpani pounding, the fourth-to-last ‘London Symphony’ was nicely 
              varied and full of contrast and then very gratefully received by 
              the audience. A fine achievement for the Munich Philharmonic, the 
              orchestra most in danger of ‘glutting’ its sound through an overly 
              one-sided dose of the heavy romantics.
              
              
              
              Jens F. Laurson
              
              
              
              
              
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