London Philharmonic Orchestra / Vedernikov, Royal Festival Hall, London
Edward Seckerson
Writer and broadcaster Edward Seckerson is Chief Classical Music and Opera Critic for The Independent. He wrote and presented the long-running BBC Radio 3 series Stage & Screen, in which he interviewed many of the most prominent writers and stars of musical theatre. He appears regularly on BBC Radio 3 and 4. On television, he has commentated a number of times at the Cardiff Singer of the World competition. He has published books on Mahler and the conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, and has been on Gramophone Magazine's review panel for many years. Edward presented the 2007 series of the Radio 4 music quiz Counterpoint. He has interviewed everyone from Leonard Bernstein to Liza Minelli; from Paul McCartney to Pavarotti: from Julie Andrews to Jessye Norman.
Saturday 14 January 2012
Latest in Reviews
On Facebook
Arts & Ents blogs
The ugly face of TV: How Jeremy Clarkson brought facial prejudice to a head
If you saw someone with a facial disfigurement walking down the street, would you A) Laugh at them B...
Zed’s Dead: Hip hop was the starting point
Hip hop and its sample-gobbling style has had an effect on much of the music today including none le...
Reverb Festival and the quiet evolution of live classical music
London’s classical music scene is changing before our eyes.
The London Philharmonic Orchestra’s intriguing new Prokofiev series is entitled “Man of the People?” and the enigma is all in the question mark.
Beginning at the end with the last of his symphonies, the 7th, was far from arbitrary. This is a piece about enchantment where childhood fairy-tales are revisited from an adulthood of compromised dreams and disillusionment. As with so much in Prokofiev, nothing is quite as it seems.
In his music for the screen satire Lieutenant Kijé which kicked off the series under the relaxed, if not to say understated, baton of Alexander Vedernikov, the juxtaposition of the magical (a poetic “last post” trumpeter ear-stretchingly distant here in the Festival Hall) and the wrily grotesque (moments of earthy bitonality at the ficticious Kijé’s burial) is all part and parcel of the language of a composer who loves to keep an audience on its toes – to engage and then to disorientate. Vedernikov was very laid-back with Kijé, a more genial, throw-away approach than we sometimes hear with bass drum thwacks and discordant raspberries from the brass like cartoonish exclamations and the earthy colourations realised with an air of total “normality”.
The earlier version of what later became the Symphony-Concerto in E minor for cello and orchestra – known simply as the Cello Concerto Op.58 - is the flip side of the Prokofiev coin and a hard piece to love. With dizzying difficulty for the cello soloist – difficulty which never really repays him or his audience - this is Prokofiev in belligerently experimental mode, dry and perplexing and increasingly obtuse. And with no disrespect to Danjulo Ishizaka, who bravely toughed it out, it requires a soloist of far bigger and more audacious personality to sustain the intrigue. And Prokofiev surely knew – hence the later revision.
But then “once upon a time” there were rapt and rangy themes that spoke of lofty romances in far off kingdoms. The 7th Symphony re-enters the nursery, re-opens the story books, and seems to revisit the enchanted and balletic world of the composer’s Cinderella. But an underlying regret now enters the equation – and Vedernikov caught it with laudable understatement with some beautiful pale colours from all departments of the LPO. But more puzzling was a certain leisureliness and slackness, for instance, in the increasingly manic but slow to ignite waltz of the second movement. One could not help but think of how Jurowski might have grasped the same nettle. The enigma continues.
- 1 Last bow for Blur at Brit awards?
- 2 BANNED: The most controversial films
- 3 The sci-fi movie Hollywood would not dare to make
- 4 Picture preview: Charline von Heyl, Tate Liverpool
- 5 The artist vandalising advertising with poetry
- 6 Adam Deacon: Streetwise star who knows the score
- 7 The Ten Best History Books
- 1 Last bow for Blur at Brit awards?
- 2 How an A-grade prank by a hacker closed a school for a day
- 3 Copenhagen, probably the best city in the world
- 4 Robert Fisk: 'If only Hague and Clinton would listen to Yusuf Islam'
- 5 How did a man buried in this frozen car for two months come out of it alive?
- 6 The sci-fi movie Hollywood would not dare to make
- 7 Ian McKellen: What's wrong with us? Should we not aspire to happiness?
- 8 Mark Steel: Iraq was such a laugh, let's do it to Iran
- 9 Aborted baby lived 45 minutes
- 10 Journalists killed in Syria rocket strike 'were targeted'
Win an adventure with Subaru XV
Enjoy a three-night family adventure for four to Slaley Hall in Northumberland.
Delivering network infrastructure for London 2012
Cisco is maximising connectivity for the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Free trial of our new iPad app
Get your daily dose of the best of British journalism, sponsored by American Airlines
Amazing restaurant offers
Three glasses of free champagne and a special menu at 46 top London restaurants.
Latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page
Can we pull the plug on the plug?
The 10 Best Lecture Series
Michael Frayn: Still making a big noise




Comments