Sir Charles Mackerras, Principal Guest Conductor of the Philharmonia 
          Orchestra, is arguably one of the most versatile conductors working 
          today with a repertoire ranging from such diverse composers as Handel 
          and Donizetti to Britten and Janacek.
        Mackerras has done more than any 
          other living conductor to put Janacek on the map and it was fitting 
          that he started his programme with The Cunning Little Vixen Suite. 
          Here Mackerras initiated crisp playing from the Philharmonia, achieving 
          that particularly brittle, spikey ‘Janacek sound’, especially from the 
          violins, and visceral trombones. The orchestral textures were perfectly 
          balanced with every individual of this great orchestra shining through. 
          
        
          Just over a decade ago the late Yehudi Menuhin described Sarah Chang 
          as: "the most wonderful, perfect, ideal violinist I had ever 
          heard." Her performance of Max Bruch’s Violin Concerto No.1 
          did much to confirm this glowing tribute.
        After the pianissimo tremolo 
          on the timpani (Prelude: Allegro moderato) Chang’s opening passage 
          had a stark cutting intensity which immediately seized one’s attention. 
          Her extraordinary tone was dark with an acidic, cutting edge to it – 
          garnets soaked in vinegar. Her playing was refreshingly ‘raw’, producing 
          sounds which had a great emotional impact. The famous melody in the 
          Adagio – overtly quoted in Richard Strauss’s Alpine Symphony 
          – was devoid of sentimentality, with Chang making it sound brooding 
          and withdrawn. Even an extremely loud and persistent cougher failed 
          to shatter the radiance and intensity of her playing. Her tough and 
          rugged account of the Finale Allegro energico had a complete 
          mastery of the Hungarian gypsy swagger essential to this music. 
        Sarah Chang is a passionate communicator, 
          and her vigorous and unique style of playing transcends mere virtuosity; 
          this was a sublime performance from a truly great artist. Mackerras 
          and the Philharmonia gave this familiar concerto an authoritative and 
          powerful accompaniment.
        "Gentlemen, now let us 
          rehearse the greatest symphony of modern times by the greatest modern 
          composer - and not only in this country." 
          That was Hans Richter’s verdict of Sir Edward Elgar’s First Symphony 
          in 1908. Mackerras’ illuminating interpretation of this symphony went 
          a long way to justify Richter’s verdict.
         His reading was intensely personal 
          and totally unlike any other performance I have heard. The hallmark 
          of his reading was reserve and restraint, free of the rhetorical excess 
          and meretricious effects which tended to mar Barbirolli’s performances. 
          The Andante Noblimente e semplice has an uncanny air of tranquillity 
          and melancholia when stripped of the usual pomp and brashness to which 
          this movement can all too easily lend itself. Thus, the powerful brass 
          interjections made their sudden entries with increased bite and impact 
          due to the subdued reserve of Mackerras’ subtle reading. 
        The Adagio – surely one 
          of the greatest slow movements ever written – was very restrained, with 
          the strings playing extremely quietly, making the music even more moving. 
          Often this movement is played calculatingly to wring the heartstrings, 
          as in Barbirolli’s overemotional approach, but Mackerras understands 
          instinctively that less is more – in this case, less schmaltz equals 
          more poignancy, and a genuine pathos. 
        After this deeply moving musical 
          experience, the closing Lento seemed almost like an anticlimax. 
          However, Mackerras conducted the Lento with a kind of voluptuous 
          grandeur, at the same time giving the music an unusually haunting and 
          intoxicating quality. He slowly built up the tension and intensity with 
          the reprise of the militaristic theme, finally ending this great work 
          in a jubilant cascade of sound.
        Mackerras and the Philharmonia 
          Orchestra have an enormous creative rapport, amply illustrated by the 
          handling of these three diverse works in an evening of inspired music-making.
        Alex Russell