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The
North Carolina Symphony: by Martha A. Fawbush June 28, 2008, Cary, NC: The North Carolina Symphony's fourth concert in its 2008 Summerfest series in Cary's Booth Amphitheatre scored a big hit with its relaxed, appreciative audience on a rather warm Saturday evening. Although the orchestra was obliged to begin a bit later than the 7:30 p.m. starting time in order to reduce the intolerably high temperature on the stage to something the musicians could tolerate, no one seemed to mind waiting, and all seemed primed to hear a good concert whenever it began. The program, entitled "Northern Lights," offered well-played performances of beautiful, very accessible music by composers Carl Nielsen (Denmark), Edvard Grieg (Norway), Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (Russia), and Jean Sibelius Finland), all of which carried listeners' minds into cool locales far removed from North Carolina's sticky warm weather.* Resident Conductor and Summerfest Artistic Director William Henry Curry was in top form musically and at his amiable best in introducing each piece on the program in phrases guaranteed to whet the interest of audience members with varying degrees of familiarity with the program. The first half of the concert included music that no one could find
fault with because of its great familiarity, accessibility, and evocative
beauty. Nielsen's "Oriental March" from his Aladdin began
the program with a great deal of atmospheric brilliance produced by
rich tonal and orchestral color as the orchestra made the most of
Nielsen's many flourishes, bells, and whistles. Next came two
thoroughly entertaining, contrasting pieces from Grieg's Peer Gynt,
which received fine performances from the orchestra. The lovely "Morning
Mood," with
its opening quietness evoking dawn's first light and later the strong
phrases calling forth a brilliant, powerful picture of full day, was
in sharp contrast with the thunderous representation of the darkness
and menace of well-crafted scenes from "In the Halls of the Mountain
King." To close the first part of the program, Curry and his players
delighted all of us with the unmistakably rich tonalities and instrumental
colors of the Scene and Waltz from Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake and the
highly infectious rhythms and folk melodies of the "Cossack Dance" from
his Mazeppa. Although the examples of brilliant playing are numerous, I was particularly impressed throughout the presentation of this symphony by the instrumentalists' great sensitivity to the need for realizing Sibelius' musical representation of peace in phrases of quiet intensity in the strings and winds as well as in powerful expressions of unrestrained passion in all sections of the orchestra, especially the transcendent playing of the high brasses. I enjoyed most the performance of the finale, with its glorious theme which is explored fully by all sections, especially the brasses, and which concludes with one of the most thrilling, shining cadences in symphonic literature. Even the limitations of the sound system could do little to dispel the satisfaction of a delighted audience with a stellar performance by a stellar orchestra. Summerfest continues
through July 19. For details, click here [inactive 8/10]. |
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