musicOMH
Prom 13:
BBC National Orchestra of Wales/Richard Hickox;
Elgar, Bliss and Walton
@ Royal Albert Hall, London, 23 July 2006
4 stars
Bryn Terfel
Bryn Terfel receiving The Queen's Medal for Music on Wednesday at the Proms (Credit: Chris Christodoulou)
There could have been no better send-off for outgoing BBC National Orchestra of Wales Principal Conductor Richard Hickox than this rip-roaring performance of William Walton's cantata Belshazzar's Feast.

With the massed voices of the BBC National Chorus of Wales, Côr Caerdydd and the London Symphony Chorus, plus the London Brass and favourite Welsh bass-baritone Bryn Terfel, the BBC NOW lifted the roof in celebration of this highly-respected and intelligent conductor.


The Proms crowd loves this sort of extravaganza, and saluted Hickox with loud cheers at the end. Whereas last night's prom was a little sedate, and even the first half of tonight's lacked an edge of focus briefly, Belshazzar was played, sung and conducted with inspiration, and it was the highlight of the season so far.

When the BBC commissioned Walton to write the piece in 1929, they had in mind a small, chamber-like affair. But by the time it was finished two years later, the orchestration had become colossal, calling for two brass bands on side stages, an extensive choir and a commanding bass-baritone soloist with the power to project over the enormous assembled forces.

Bryn Terfel has these talents in spades, of course, and although his opening stanza was a little strained on the top, his second entry contained some of the best singing I've heard all year. Performing twelve lines of text a cappella (unaccompanied), Terfel brought the Lied-singer's attention to detail to rhetorical patterns such as 'Of precious stones, of pearls, of fine linen, of purple silk and scarlet'. Every word was audible in this massive hall, all the consonants were carefully pronounced, and Terfel actually engaged with the audience with his eyes and body too. Surely no-one present will ever forget his sizzling bellow of 'Praise ye…the god of gold' nor the announcement of Belshazzar's death.

The latter moment was also brought to life by the chorus' chilling cry of 'slain', sounding indeed like the hand of God had been at work. The opening chorus got the piece off to an excellent start: dispensing temporarily with their scores, the tenors and basses focussed on Hickox's detailed direction and pointed every word with care in this unaccompanied section. The sopranos were excellent in the 'Babylon' episode, while the closing three stanzas approached the mind-blowing in terms of intensity.

The orchestra, too, had some showcase moments – atmospheric cellos after the opening chorus, bass clarinet in the first full chorus and the mounting tension of trumpet fanfares, mesmeric strings, the double bands and the cymbal coming together in the 'Praise ye' chorus.

Article continues 


The evening started with the best-of-British composers with which Hickox is perhaps most associated, Elgar and Bliss.

The Concert Overture In the South (Alassio) is an under-rated masterpiece, and here Hickox and his orchestra did Elgar proud. The opening flourish with bold brass and fluid strings moved through a melody of sunshine to the more melancholy oboe theme of the shepherd. The rising chromatic lines of the trombones were magnificent. Perhaps the solo viola was too underpowered to be fully enjoyed in its duet with the harp, and there was a loss of focus in the recapitulation, but these were minor points in a coherent performance.

Bliss was not the first to explore the notion of depicting colours in music (or 'synaesthesia') – Wagner's Tristan and various pieces by Schoenberg had already been there – but his A Colour Symphony was perhaps the first to make it the main focus of the score. Yet for me, there's not enough difference between his idea of 'Purple' and 'Blue' to sustain interest through both of these movements, and even 'Red' and 'Green' resort too much to pastiche or convention where the young composer ran out of ideas. The opening pomp of Purple eventually incorporated some darker musical colours, and the chamber-like use of the strings in four-part harmony was nicely timed.

Red almost belongs to the Proms: its closing bars are used in the opening titles of the concerts' television coverage every year, which probably explains the smattering of applause after that movement (though its bobbing nature was nicely characterised by swaying strings and trilling piccolo).

If Blue was less interesting, then Green made up for it with its inventive and almost perverse use of a fugal outline (including a percussive section for two timpani players, brilliantly executed here).

Hickox is now the orchestra's Conductor Laureate, and though he will be sorely missed after evenings as inspired as this one, it's good to know that he'll be back.


  share with:  Facebook | Digg | other sites



BUY CLASSICAL CDS
BUY CONCERT TICKETS
NOW IN CLASSICAL
RELATED ARTICLES
PROM 72:
OAE/Mackerras

PROM 70:
BBCSO/Haitink

PROM 68:
Camarata Salzburg/Kavakos

PROM 67:
Philadelphia/Eschenbach

PROM 65:
Berlin Phil/Rattle

PSM 4:
OSJ/Lubbock & Wallfisch

PROM 64:
Berlin Phil/Rattle

PROM 61:
Pittsburgh SO/Slatkin

PROM 60:
ONF/Masur

PROM 58:
BBCCO/Hazlewood

PROM 57:
OCE/Herreweghe

PROM 56:
NDRSO/von Dohnanyi

PROM 55:
BBCSO/Saraste

PROM 54:
Minnesota/Vänskä

PROM 53:
LPO/Jurowski

PROM 52:
BBCSO/Gruber

PROM 51:
Mahler Jugendorchester/Jordan

PROM 50:
LSO/Davis

PROM 49:
Mariinsky/Gergiev

PROM 48:
Mariinsky/Gergiev

PROM SAT MAT 3:
Britten Sinfonia/De Ridder

PROM 47:
LSO/Gergiev

PROM 45:
City of London/Daniel

PROM 44:
Budapest/Fischer

PROM 43:
BBCSO/Belohlavek

PROM 42:
Finnish Radio/Oramo

PROM 41:
Philharmonia/Salonen

PROM 40:
Maxim Vengerov

PROM 39:
EYO/Ashkenazy

PROM 38:
John Adams

PROM 37:
Steve Reich

PROM 36:
BBC SSO/Volkov (2)

PROM 35:
BBC SSO/Volkov

PROM 34:
BBC Phil/Tortelier

PROM 33:
King's Consort/King

PROM 32:
BBCSO/Davis

PROM 30:
NYO/Davis

PSM 2:
AAM/Egarr

PROM 28:
RSNO/Denève

PROM 27:
BBCNOW/Ono

PROM 26:
BBCSO/Davis

PROM 25:
London Sinfonietta/Knussen

PROM 24:
The English Concert/Manze

PROM 23:
BBC Phil/Sinaisky

PROM 22:
BBC Phil/Noseda

PROM 21:
BBCSO/Robertson

PROM 17:
EBS/Gardiner

PROM 16:
CBSO/Sakari Oramo

PROM 15:
BBC CO/Barry Wordsworth

PROM 14:
BBC SO/David Robertson

PROM 13:
BBC NOW/Richard Hickox (2)

PROM 11:
BBC NOW/Richard Hickox

PROM 9:
Northern Sinfonia/Zehetmair

PROM 8:
BBC Philharmonic/Noseda

PROM 7:
The Queen's Prom: BBCSO/Jiri Belohlavek

PROM 6:
Glyndebourne Opera: Così fan tutte

PROM 5:
London Winds/Michael Collins

CHAMBER PROM 1:
Christoph Eschenbach/Paris Soloists

PROM 4:
Hallé/Mark Elder

PROM 3:
Siegfried: Christoph Eschenbach

PROM 2:
Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Roger Norrington

PROM 1:
BBCSO/Jiri Belohlavek

EXTERNAL LINKS
BBC Proms 2006



  opera and classical index...
about us | staff | copyright | write to us | mailing list | home page

© 1999-2008 OMH. all rights reserved