Royal Albert Hall, London
Mannered during the Mozart and Strauss, the Danish conductor was most at home with his idol, Nielsen
The first of Thomas Søndergård‘s two Proms with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales placed Strauss alongside Mozart, his idol, and Nielsen, his very different near contemporary. It was, in some respects, an unwieldy evening. Fine conductor though he is, Søndergård is not a natural Straussian, and consequently this was a concert of two differing halves.
Søndergård seemed uneasy with the discursive form of Tod und Verklärung, with which he opened, shaping it tentatively at times and taking the difficult final peroration too slowly. Fits and starts replaced the music’s natural ebb and flow. The drama, meanwhile, occasionally seemed mannered, and solemnity replaced ecstasy at the close. Strauss’s dark, orchestral sound turned overly dense and a bit brass-heavy. Things brightened with the Burleske in D Minor for piano and orchestra. Søndergård responded more sharply to its form, a straightforward single movement sonata. It was low-key for a work that, as its title suggests, aspires to comedy, though Søndergård nicely emphasised the underlying Brahmsian influences that Strauss, turning towards Wagner, would later play down. The soloist was Francesco Piemontesi, who was hard-hitting and energetic, yet admirably witty, debonair and flamboyant.
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SOURCE: Classical music | The Guardian – Read entire story here.