 Born 
          in Paris in 1962, Marc Minkowski is regarded as one of today's foremost 
          interpreters of baroque music, especially of rarely heard French and 
          Italian works. He has championed music by Marais, Mouret, Charpentier, 
          Lully and Rameau, and revived interest in lesser-known Handel operas, 
          such as 'Teseo', 'Amadigi', 'Riccardo primo' and 'Ariodante'.
Born 
          in Paris in 1962, Marc Minkowski is regarded as one of today's foremost 
          interpreters of baroque music, especially of rarely heard French and 
          Italian works. He has championed music by Marais, Mouret, Charpentier, 
          Lully and Rameau, and revived interest in lesser-known Handel operas, 
          such as 'Teseo', 'Amadigi', 'Riccardo primo' and 'Ariodante'. 
        
        The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment 
          were the perfect group of instruments for this programme of classical 
          works by Haydn and Beethoven. The main problem with listening to this 
          concert was the boxy acoustic of the Queen Elizabeth Hall which conveyed 
          little ambiance and bloom, making the orchestral textures seem more 
          congested they need be. However, the combination of Minkowski and the 
          OAE made music that was both invigorating and enlightening indeed.
        
        Joseph Haydn’s Symphony No.104 
          ‘London’ came across as a far more radical sounding score than usual 
          under Marc Minkowski’s rigorous and lithe direction. The opening Adagio 
          had great power and a sense of noble grandeur with the hard stick 
          timpani having great impact The development from the Adagio to 
          the Allegro was rather fudged - a notoriously difficult transition 
          – but things soon took off with passion and drive, with the brass especially 
          coming through with a grainy intensity. The Andante was stripped 
          bare of the usually sluggish, romantic inflections that many more ‘old 
          fashioned’ conductors bring to it; here the music was urgent and full 
          of drama. 
        
        Minkowski rightly made the Menuetto 
          angular and strident giving this music a kind of tough elegance while 
          the Finale:Spirito had great swagger and drive, with the horns 
          especially projecting an eerie darkness. I have no doubt that this reading 
          must be very close to how Haydn wanted us to hear this highly inventive 
          and spirited symphony.
        
         
         Haydn’s 
          C major Cello Concerto was even better conducted than 
          the ‘London’ symphony, and the playing of Pieter Wispelwey was 
          extraordinary, producing a refreshingly rugged and radical style of 
          playing. In the first movement Wispelwey chose to play with a rather 
          gruff, rugged style emphasising the humour inherent in the music, as 
          if sharing some private joke with orchestra and audience. The Adagio 
          was rendered in a subdued and subtle manner, making his instrument sound 
          extraordinarily distant. With the closing Allegro the cellist 
          assumed a consciously gritty sound playing with incredible attack and 
          expressiveness, but never sounding crude or heavy. The OAE gave a wonderfully 
          spirited accompaniment to this exhilarating performance. For an encore 
          we were treated to a sound bite from an unaccompanied Bach Cello Suite.
Haydn’s 
          C major Cello Concerto was even better conducted than 
          the ‘London’ symphony, and the playing of Pieter Wispelwey was 
          extraordinary, producing a refreshingly rugged and radical style of 
          playing. In the first movement Wispelwey chose to play with a rather 
          gruff, rugged style emphasising the humour inherent in the music, as 
          if sharing some private joke with orchestra and audience. The Adagio 
          was rendered in a subdued and subtle manner, making his instrument sound 
          extraordinarily distant. With the closing Allegro the cellist 
          assumed a consciously gritty sound playing with incredible attack and 
          expressiveness, but never sounding crude or heavy. The OAE gave a wonderfully 
          spirited accompaniment to this exhilarating performance. For an encore 
          we were treated to a sound bite from an unaccompanied Bach Cello Suite.
        
        Minkowski’s reading of Beethoven’s 
          Second Symphony was rhythmically taut and urgently brisk, his 
          tempi sounding identical with those of Toscanini’s 1939 NBC SO account. 
          From beginning to end this was an inspired, vital performance with all 
          the musicians keeping an eye on each other as well as their director. 
          I say director because Minkowski doesn’t so much ‘conduct’ as directs 
          his players by queuing them in a more intimate fashion. While this period 
          orchestra is obviously smaller than the modern standard symphony orchestra 
          (having for instance just three double basses) they sounded full-bodied 
          and weighty, producing a textured sound so apt for Beethoven. The use 
          again of hard sticks and ‘raw’ metallic sounding horns and trumpets 
          gave the music a more militaristic and radical dissonance, in contrast 
          to the more emollient, streamlined, sound of modern symphony orchestras.
        
        Not only were Minkowski’s tempi, 
          athleticism, and rhythmic emphases close to Toscanini’s, but so also 
          was the style of playing he got from the OAE, which was, at times surprisingly 
          reminiscent of the much larger NBC SO: gutsy, grainy strings and raucous 
          brass, forward pointed woodwind and firm timpani; all of which combined 
          to dispel the popularly held misconception that music of the Age of 
          Enlightenment was well-mannered, lightweight and pretty.
        
        This excellent concert clearly 
          demonstrated how Haydn and Beethoven should be heard: as radical composers 
          and not Eighteenth Century curios.
        Alex Russell