OVERNIGHT REVIEW: Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and soprano Karina Gauvin at Alex Theater

By Robert D. Thomas

Music Critic

Pasadena Star-News/San Gabriel Valley Tribune/Whittier Daily
News

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Los Angeles Chamber
Orchestra; Jeffrey Kahane, conductor; Karina Gauvin, soprano

Dvorak: Nocture in B
Major;
Britten: Les Illuminations,
Now sleeps the crimson petal

Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 (Eroica)

Saturday, October 15, 2011 at Alex Theater

Next concert: Tonight at 7 p.m. at Royce Hall, UCLA

Information: www.laco.org

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Last night’s concert by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra
was not only illuminating and well played, it also proved to be a
quintessential example of the rich diversity of orchestral music that regularly
pops up in Southern California.

 

Friday night, the Los Angeles Philharmonic — with 90 or so
musicians on stage — began with the swirling mists of Ravel’s Daphnis and Chloe, Suite No. 2 and ended
with the smashing chords of Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5. Last night, LACO —
with two-dozen string players on the Alex Theater stage — began with a single
cello line (played elegantly by Andrew Shulman), the opening notes of Dvorak’s Nocture in B Major. We knew immediately
that we weren’t in Russia anymore (or in Walt Disney Concert Hall, either).

 

Such diversity is, of course, one of the great strengths of
LACO, which for 43 years — and particularly in the last 15 with Jeffrey Kahane
as music director — has carved out a distinct niche in the local (and national)
landscape with innovative programs beautifully played. Last night was a prime
example of both qualities.

 

After Dvorak’s meanderings set a quiet, shimmering prologue,
French-Canadian soprano Karina Gauvin came onstage as the ravishing soloist in
Benjamin Britten’s Les Illuminations. This
work, which LACO was playing for the fifth time, is the English composer’s 1939
setting of nine of 42 poems written by French poet Arthur Rambaud who Kahane,
in his preconcert lecture, called the “Father of Modernism” (as Christine Lee
Gengaro noted in her program-book essay, Rimbaud influenced such disparate 20th
century artists as Pablo Picasso, Allen Ginsburg, Dylan Thomas, Bob Dylan and
Jim Morrison).

 

Gauvin, a tall, statuesque blond, sang the poems with a rich
middle register and gleaming top. She also invested the set with great emotion,
especially in Royaut and Parade. The final poem, Dpart, which comes immediately after Parade, was hauntingly beautiful as
Gauvin intoned the lines “Seen enough … Had enough … Known enough … Leaving for
new affection and noise” with poignant reflection.

 

After Les
Illuminations,
Gauvin returned for what amounted to a planned encore:
Britten’s setting of Alfred Lord Tennyson’s poem Now sleeps the crimson petal. Gauvin (who had sung Les Illuminations from memory but used a
score for the Tennyson poem) was equally impressive in this five-minute work,
which was being performed by LACO for the first time. In both pieces, Kahane
and the strings offered delicate, evocative accompaniment for Gauvin, aided in Now sleeps the crimson petal by David
Everson on French horn (Britten originally wrote the piece to be part of his Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings but
it was ultimately not included in that work).

 

After intermission, Kahane and Co. turned to Beethoven’s
Symphony No. 3 (Eroica). This was
part of Kahane’s inaugural concert as LACO in music director in 1997 as the
curly haired conductor was determined to send LACO beyond the “traditional”
chamber orchestra repertoire of baroque and early classical period music.
Actually, as Kahane noted in his preconcert lecture, the 39 musicians on stage
last night represented about the size of orchestra that Beethoven would have
used in the first performances of this landmark symphony, which was completed
in 1804.

 

Although the smaller-sized ensemble means a reduction in the
kind of weight and heft we normally associate with contemporary performances of
the Eroica, the ultra-brisk tempos
that Kahane prefers for his Beethoven performances sound better with reduced
forces anyway. The first movement emphasized the brio in the Allegro con brio tempo
marking and the third movement was ultra-vivace.
Even the second movement was more of a brisk jog rather than a funeral march. In the final movement,
things broadened out just a touch and the entire performance finished with a fine
sense of majesty. The orchestra seemed to take all of this calmly in stride,
bringing a sense of crisp lan to the entire performance, which elicited a
thunderous ovation from the audience.

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(c) Copyright 2011, Robert D. Thomas. All rights reserved.
Portions may be quoted with attribution.

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