• Anne-Sophie Mutter at Strathmore

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jun 19 12:29:01 2022
    The last concert I attended pre-COVID was Anne-Sophie
    Mutter playing the Beethoven violin concerto in Montreal.
    I remember there was a huge parade exhorting political
    action on climate change. It was only appropriate that
    the subsequent COVID-bookend concert featured the same
    soloist and music, this time in Washington DC. There was
    a parade this time too -- about gay pride -- which almost
    prevented me from leaving the hotel. To add to the
    log-jam, a couple decided to have a wedding in the middle
    of Rhode Island Ave. They not even gay -- just interracial.
    For a while I was swept up in it, unwittingly becoming the
    lone representative of the old-and-ugly tribe in the
    proceedings.

    The Strathmore Center could house 1800 people and was
    only 2/3 full; the classical music circuit was a long
    way from back to normal. This part-time venue of the
    Baltimore Symphony Orchestra was rather down-to-earth.
    Plastic chairs and wooden tables that needed a coat
    of paint decorated the waiting area; even if the
    concession stand was manned (it was not), champagne
    would not been on the menu. I half-expected dressed-
    to-kill contingents from the universities and embassies
    to flock there. Instead it was mostly old-timers who
    knew their music. Not a single soul applauded out
    of place. (This was not your Carnegie Hall celebrity-
    chasing crowd.) The front rows had a younger
    demographic though; a tattooed guy sitting in seat
    101 could have been a Navy Seal. The orchestra was
    at least a third Asian, and there seemed all of one
    African American there, a cellist. The BSO certainly
    did not recruit locally.

    Sir Andrew Davis was supposed to conduct, but was
    replaced by a youngish Nicolas Hersh after testing
    positive for COVID. Hersh immediately became my
    favorite conductor. He yanked Elgar's Falstaff and
    Frederick Delius's "Walk to the Paradise Garden" (I
    have heard neither) in favor of the crowd-pleasing
    Brahms' symphony #1, one of the few symphonies I
    actually love, in the first half of the concert.
    (In Montreal, Mutter played the second half too.
    I love the new protocol!) The first and fourth
    movements were resolutely rendered while the middle
    stanzas were graceful, waltz-like, rich and sonorous,
    as Brahms should be. The veteran BSO could probably
    play without a conductor but Hersh's enthusiasm
    certainly did credit to the piece. So did the concert
    master (Jonathan Carney?); I had forgotten that the
    second movement was like a mini violin concerto that
    relied very much on one player's skill. I think
    it was Audrey Wright who took over as concert master
    after the intermission.

    I half expected a rainbow color, gay-pride outfit, but
    Anne-Sophie Mutter's strapless ball gown was plain
    blue, in shades of cornflower, or that of a nurse's
    apron. It had no embroidery of any kind, and was of
    the simplest design I have seen her wear. The concerto
    is correspondingly solemn, melancholic, and profoundly
    moving. The first two movements were so overwhelmingly,
    heart-stoppingly emotional and dramatic, especially her
    entries into the cadenza and low register solo parts.
    Even more than her Montreal appearance, she distilled
    all the pathos out of the piece. Her intense facial
    expression added to the atmosphere. (She and Hersh
    were the only unmasked musicians, speaking of the new
    protocol). It was as if she decided to shoulder all
    the tragedies --- war in our time, COVID sufferings,
    mass shootings -- and redeem humanity through
    Beethoven's music. I think she even wore a cross.
    It was the first time I had seen jewelry in the 20+
    concerts of hers I've attended. Under the klieg
    lights on center stage even her borderline blond hair
    shone like meteorites. Shiny pedants wouldn't be
    easy to miss.

    In that sense, the centerpiece of the concert could
    only have been Beethoven, who composed the concerto
    during the Napoleonic wars and was disillusioned by the
    Corsican ogre he once hailed as the common man's hero.
    Beethoven's early compositions were exceptionally
    intricate (like his first piano concerto), and his
    late string quartets were explicitly meant for posterity,
    way ahead of their times (and perhaps of ours still).
    Yet his middle period masterpieces (the 5th piano
    concerto, the violin concerto, symphony #7) have such
    grand simplicity, momentum, and inevitability, if he
    did not write them those pieces would have written
    themselves. They were the purest expressions of human
    spirituality.

    This concert finally made me realize how technically
    challenging the cadenza at the end of first movement
    was. Mutter was admittedly a bit loose in the
    beginning, but played to flawless perfection after
    a few minutes of warm-up. Her interpretation, here
    as in Montreal, was so different from that in her
    recordings with von Karajan or Mazur -- so expressive
    in the slow parts but fiendishly fast elsewhere -- I
    hope she records it with someone, anyone. She is the
    true auteur of her concerto performances by now.

    The third movement restored the resolute mood at the
    beginning of the concert. It was like a call to
    arms, a heralding of hope and perseverance. The
    soloist had to play almost non-stop, repeating the
    main theme in two registers. In the past it was not
    my favorite movement, but Mutter made it come alive;
    the notes were like water boiling off the red-hot
    cauldron of her Stradivarius. (Many of Beethoven's
    violin sonatas are that way too -- in the hands of
    novices they can be insufferable.) The mini-
    "cadenza" is particularly thrillingly rendered. A
    week later the movement was still playing in my head.

    I was hoping there would be a substantial encore from
    Mutter and the orchestra -- perhaps one of the two
    Romances -- but in truth everyone was spent after the
    Beethoven. She came back on stage and played Bach's
    Sarabande, alone, as she had done in Montreal. When
    I walked back to the hotel on Rhode Island at 11pm,
    the revelers from the parade were still roaming the
    streets.

    PS --

    For once, Washington DC had pleasant weather. I
    managed to crisscross much of the district, even
    to the outskirts like Adam Morgan, the embassy row,
    the Eastern Market, and Georgetown. On the last
    day I walked to the final (northeastern) corner I
    haven't visited, and was incredibly moved to find
    a replica of the "Goddess of Democracy" statue
    standing in an obscure park on New Jersey and G
    street. It was a week after the 33rd anniversary
    of Tiananmen Massacre, but wreaths of flowers still
    adorned the statue. Truth, and remembrance, have
    indeed persevered.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)