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              SEEN 
              AND HEARD CONCERT REVIEW 
            
             
            
              
            
            Mark Berry 
               
 
            
            Prokofiev, 
            Falla, and Ravel :
            
              
              
            Chicago Symphony Orchestra /Muti, Royal Festival Hall,  6.10. 2007  
            (MB)
              
            
            
            
              
              
            Prokofiev: Symphony no.3 in C minor, Op.44
            Falla: The 
            Three-cornered Hat, Suite no.2
            Ravel: Rapsodie
            espagnole
            Ravel: Boléro
            
            
            This was a splendid concert, full of orchestral colour, which acted 
            as a showcase for numerous strengths of both orchestra and 
            conductor. That the Chicago Symphony Orchestra is one of the world's 
            greatest orchestras can hardly have been in doubt even before, but 
            there could be no doubt having heard it at the Royal Festival Hall. 
            It is in many respects a very American sound, with gleaming strings, 
            great precision of attack, and of course its celebrated brass 
            section, but it never sounded anonymously 'international' as some 
            bands of that ilk can. Muti 
            is of course a brilliant conductor, 'old school' and all the better 
            for it. I was put in mind more than once of the orchestral command 
            exercised by two former music directors in Chicago, Fritz
            Reiner and Sir Georg
            Solti. Yet there was none 
            of the brashness that could sometimes characterise
            Solti's work.
            
            Prokofiev's Third Symphony packed quite a punch from the very 
            outset. Those thumping initial chords made a duly screaming impact, 
            not only with their volume, not only with their dissonance, but also 
            with the supremely judged balance, which allowed more colours to 
            emerge than has often been the case in performances of this work. 
            This was achieved without any lessening of the impact of brass and 
            percussion. If the opening overshadowed the rest of the first 
            movement, this is attributable to Prokofiev rather than to the 
            performance, which did everything he could conceivably have asked. 
            It does seem to me that there is something of a mismatch between the 
            musical material, initially conceived for the masterly
            
            Fiery Angel, and symphonic form, but probably the best 
            course of action is to consider a surreal succession of often garish 
            images, rather than to worry too much about formal shortcomings. The 
            repose of the slow movement was certainly welcome.
            Muti's command of the long, 
            almost vocal lines impressed, as did the varied solo contributions. 
            The violin glissandi and other ghostly aspects of the scherzo came 
            across with unusual vividness, and never at the expense of the 
            clearer form of that movement. Much the same could be said of the 
            well-nigh faultless finale, whose marriage of
            grotesquery and harmonic 
            side-slipping lyricism was portrayed with both a keen ear for colour 
            and balance and an impressive sense of theatrical effect. This 
            symphony is not often performed, but I can safely say that I have 
            not heard a superior performance.
            
            In the second half, we moved to Spain. The second suite from
            Falla's ballet,
            
            The Three-cornered Hat, received an equally committed 
            reading. Rhythms were acutely pointed, as was their marriage to 
            harmonic progression. The array of colours on offer was 
            kaleidoscopic, with warm and sultry moments caught in vivid relief 
            against the backdrop of the dance. As with every section of the 
            evening's programme, there was never the slightest doubt that the 
            musicians knew precisely where they were going; they acted as 
            perfect hosts during our colourful tour.
            
            The Ravel items were, if anything, more impressive still, partly, I 
            suspect, on account of their being whole works, and partly on 
            account of the still greater scope they offered for
            colouristic 
            differentiation. In this respect, orchestra and conductor wanted 
            nothing. The emphasis may have been more brazenly 'Spanish' than 
            French performances of the old school might have offered, but there 
            is nothing wrong with that. There was certainly none of that 
            wateriness in the strings that has often characterised readings of 
            that school. Precision was at the very core, as it should be, since 
            Ravel has none of Debussy's ambiguity; not for nothing did 
            Stravinsky dub him a Swiss watchmaker. The
            ostinato rhythm of the
            Rapsodie's 'Prélude 
            à la nuit' pulsated with a 
            winning combination of persistence and languor, whilst Ravel weaved 
            his colouristic and 
            harmonic magic above. And the cumulative effect of
            Boléro can rarely have been 
            better achieved - even if that very success did point to the 
            undoubted monotony of the work. Thank goodness for that final 
            harmonic wrench to E major, without which I might have been driven 
            mad.
            
            As an encore, Muti and the
            CSO offered a blistering 
            account of the Overture to Verdi's 
            La 
            forza
            
            del
            
            destino. 
            It exhibited all the virtues outlined above, and moreover boasted a 
            flexibility born of the conductor's immersion in Verdi's music. To 
            return to the beginning, its opening evocation of fate packed just 
            as much a punch as had the barbarism of the Prokofiev symphony, yet 
            the celebrated melody that followed (forever associated in my mind 
            with the films 
            Jean 
            de 
            Florette and 
            Manon 
            des 
            sources) was as tender as one could imagine. Even for a 
            Verdi sceptic such as myself, this provided a worthy culmination to 
            the evening. The repertoire exhibited not a trace of Teutonic 
            profundity, but our musical heritage possesses other aspects 
            demanding attention, attention which paid off handsomely in this 
            case.
