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Prom 26:
BBC Symphony Orchestra/Sir Andrew Davis;
Elgar/Payne, Shostakovich, Britten, Prokofiev and J.S.Bach/Davis
@ Royal Albert Hall, London, 2 August 2006
3 stars
Nicole Cabell
Nicole Cabell (Credit: Devon Cass)
This was by some way the most baffling Prom of the season so far, its promise of pomp, circumstance and humour never quite hitting the mark, despite the odd memorable cameo.

Top of the bill, or rather tucked in after the interval, was the world premiere of Anthony Payne's completion of a sixth Pomp and Circumstance march, in effect his 'Opus 3' of Elgar arrangements.

It made a mostly satisfying whole, with a skilful juxtaposition of double and triple time.

But when the slower theme appeared the first time round, it was quickly despatched and felt like an idea Elgar would not have used beyond sketches.

Burton's orchestration was odd in places, with a strange affliction for the bell tree, though a finale in the major key rounded off the piece appropriately if not fully convincingly, making its case to be a possible extension to the cycle of five rather shaky.

Placing Andrew Davis' orchestration of Bach's Passacaglia after this was a strange move, its solemnity totally at odds with the mood of the Elgar. That said Davis conducted an interesting performance, and from the opening statement on staccato piano and woodwind the orchestration was economical and sensitive.

Most impressive, however, was soprano Nicole Cabell, winner of last year's BBC Singer of the World competition. Britten's Les Illuminations has been part of her repertoire for a while now, and her full, rounded tones were perfectly suited to this sultry music, carried effortlessly above Andrew Davis's sensitive string accompaniment. The magical descent with which she ended Phase was worth admission alone, her projection to the audience exemplary.

Bookending the programme were youthful works of Soviet origin, traditional in form but impish in nature. To open, an account of Prokofiev's 'Classical' symphony that had routine charm and the occasional touch of humour, but whose violin ensemble was at times rather sketchy.

Article continues 


To finish, a bizarre performance of Shostakovich's showpiece, the Concerto for Piano, Trumpet & Strings (Piano Concerto No. 1). As expected Evgeny Kissin's technique was formidable, but his performance was peppered with strange note emphases and other interpretative quirks, usually at the expense of trumpeter Sergei Nakariakov.

After a wonderful slow movement where his instrument almost took on the persona of a cor anglais, Nakariakov seemed strangely uninvolved in the finale, his head barely rising to play, while Kissin continued with all manner of outrageous crashes and tempo adjustments. Given the nature of the piece these were not inappropriate, but were still done with little or no humour until close to the end, by which time the trumpet had been relegated to also-ran rather than partner-in-crime. This was a shame, as Nakariakov played beautifully, but was further emphasised by Kissin's decision to give his own encore, a larger-than-life March from Prokofiev's Love for Three Oranges.

On the plus side, it was an adventurous programme that recalled the spirit of the Proms fifty years ago, even if its execution was wildly unpredictable!


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EXTERNAL LINKS
BBC Proms 2006



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