musicOMH
Prom 57:
Orchestre des Champs-Elysees/Philippe Herreweghe: Mozart
@ Royal Albert Hall, London, 27 July 2006
3 stars
Philippe Herreweghe
Philippe Herreweghe
Philippe Herreweghe and his Orchestre des Champs-Élysées gave an all-Mozart programme that was beautifully precise but a little too controlled and ultimately not very engaging.

It was a well-balanced evening beginning with the Meistermusik (reconstructed from the Masonic Funeral Music), the late great Symphony No. 39 and Mozart's final work, the mighty Requiem in D Minor.

With a programme like that, one should have expected to leave the Albert Hall excited and uplifted but for me that didn't quite happen.

The concert began with a tasty snippet of lesser-known music, finished the first half with a strong interpretation of the symphony and continued with a performance of the Requiem that I found disappointingly cold.

Mozart's affiliations with the freemasons are well-known and there are a number of the late works that are associated with masonic practice, most notably The Magic Flute. The best known of the works written specifically for Lodge ceremonies is the Masonic Funeral Music, K477 and the version we heard in this concert was that reconstructed by French musicologist Philippe A Autexier in 1985.

It replaces, from the original non-choral version, the parts for the first oboe and clarinet with a chorus of tenors and basses, who sing the Latin words from the third chapter of Lamentations. This was beautifully played by the orchestra and sung by the men of the Collegium Vocale Gent and, at just six minutes, was all too brief.

Article continues 


The Symphony No. 39 has some interesting connections with the number 3, which itself has strong masonic associations. Clearly, the number 39 is made up of a complex series of combinations of the number and this work was also allegedly intended to be part of a triptych with the final two symphonies. It is in the key of E flat, which contains three flats in its key-signature and has been described as the "Masonic" key. It was also written three years before the composer's death but maybe we shouldn't read too much into that.

This was a briskly played and enjoyable performance, Herreweghe bringing out the Haydnesque qualities of the symphony and most rhythmic in the third movement with its ländler overtones. There was some fine clarinet playing and expressive brass and timpani. The symphony turned out to be the highlight of the evening.

Unfortunately, what should have been the big piece of the concert, the Requiem, was much too careful, lacking drama and passion. There was an attractive line-up of soloists – two of the finest British singers, soprano Carolyn Sampson and tenor Mark Padmore plus the experienced contralto Ingeborg Danz and bass Alfred Reiter. Sampson is one of the most radiant sopranos currently working and is always a joy to hear. The Requiem being dominated by the chorus, however, we heard far too little of her this time.

The full forces of the Collegium Vocale Gent sang well and there was a sense throughout the concert of a real cohesion between conductor, orchestra and chorus, not surprising for an ensemble that works together so often under Herreweghe's direction. The solo trombone during the Tuba mirum stood out. However, the performance was just too controlled for my liking and I found my mind wandering at times, hardly something you'd expect in this piece which, as the genius's farewell to the world, should keep you gripped from beginning to end.

So, a pleasant evening but not an inspiring one. I can't even blame it on Mozart overkill as, although there's certainly plenty on offer during the season, this is the first of the composer's work I've heard at the Proms this year.


  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