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AND HEARD COMPETITION REPORT

ARD International Music Competition:
Prize Winner Concert No.2 (Chamber
Orchestra Concert),
Prinzregententheater, Munich, 18.9.2008 (JFL)
Like a revue of old friends, familiar works from rounds before pass
before my eyes and ears at the three prize-winner concerts. Teng
Li, third-prize winner in this years viola competition failed to
make it beyond the semi finals in 2004 when she didn’t take the
hurdle of the
Hoffmeister
Concerto for Viola in D-major. Now she’d
evidently
subdued it and put it out on display again in the
second of these prize winner concerts – this one with the Munich
Chamber Orchestra (MKO) at the Prinzregententheater.
There is something irresistibly charming about the
Charles Koechlin
Bassoon Sonata that the South-Tyrolean
second-prize winner Philipp Tutzer (a Camerata Academica
Mozarteum Salzburg member) played so securely and even
lyrically. A round tone in all registers, he gave the bassoon an air
of elegance and a touch of the debonair – a skill in-and-of-itself.
The sonata is not the least so pleasant because it doesn’t last
longer than the music it contains.
The Afiara Quartet, the San Francisco State
University’s Quartet-in-Residence, were personified cohesion for
much of the competition… until they had a
Beethoven
(op.59/2) accident in the finale. There was plenty
of that cohesion to be heard again this night, when they took the
opportunity to redeem Beethoven, themselves, and show why they
deserved that second prize, after all. Beethoven op.18/1, which they
played very nicely in the first round already, was again presented
to great effect, now with the pressure gone but exhaustion running
high. It wasn’t nearly as tight a performances anymore, but easily
as good: looser and more spontaneous – rightfully earning the
enthusiastic ovations from the audience.
A most pleasant conclusion of the concert was handed to the audience
in the form of Mozart’s modestly interesting
Bassoon Concerto
in B-major K.191 – at the hands of second- and
audience-prize winner Christian Kunert (an
Hamburg Opera
Orchestra / Hamburg Philharmonic member).
Voluminous and clear, elegiac and humorous in turn, this was another
commercial for what the most beautiful looking instrument in
the orchestra, with Kunert expertly hiding that after two weeks of
competition playing he was quite ready to be done with the whole
affair. If indeed he felt that way.
%20Sigi%20Müller%203rd%20Prize%20Viola.jpg)
Teng
Li
At least as much joy as listing to Teng Li was it to hear the
MKO
again – a wonderful sounding chamber orchestra that, a few lesser
moments aside, cannot be commended enough for the engagement with
which they participated in all of the competitions’ concerts,
not just this broadcast, live, penultimate one.
%20Sigi%20Müller%203rd%20Prize%20Clarinet.jpg)
Taira Kaneko
Hearing the souped-up Weber quintet I wondered if there isn’t such a
version for the Brahms quintet as well, and if that might not make a
better would-be concerto. A greater flexibility of tempos and
greater dynamic range – in short: a conductor – would likely have
benefited the work, avoiding the prolonged crawl that lasted up
until the superbly played, madly leaping finale.
%20Sigi%20Müller%202nd%20Prize%20Bassoon.jpg)
Philipp Tutzer
%20Sigi%20Müller%202nd%20Prize%20SQ4t.jpg)
The Afiara Quartet
%20Sigi%20Müller%202nd%20and%20Audience%20Prize%20Bassoon.jpg)
Christian Kunert
All pictures © Sigi Müller
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