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United States Dvořák, Brahms, Beethoven: Robert McDuffie (violin), Czech National Symphony Orchestra / Steven Mercurio (conductor). New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Newark, 19.2.2023. (DS)
Dvořák – Czech Suite in D Major, Op.39 (Finale)
Brahms – Violin Concerto in D Major, Op.77
Beethoven – Symphony No.5 in C Minor, Op.67
As a New York City concertgoer, I’ll usually stroll or journey the subway to my vacation spot. But oft forgotten is the straightforward proximity of New Jersey-based performances. NJPAC is an unlimited, three-tiered corridor that’s each well-attended and simply accessible, and a 20-minute journey from New York’s Penn Station will get you to Newark. After arriving on the Thirties prepare station designed by McKim, Mead & White, it’s value a linger within the not too long ago refurbished historic lobby earlier than a brief stroll to the efficiency heart. This previous weekend, it was well worth the journey to listen to the visiting Czech National Symphony Orchestra carried out by Steve Mercurio with visitor soloist, Robert McDuffie.
The live performance caught to big-name composers – Dvořák, Brahms and Beethoven – and the supply was under no circumstances tedious. They got down to current them as story tellers and achieved that each step of the best way. From the opening notes of the primary work on this system – the Finale from Dvořák’s Czech Suite – Mercurio and the orchestra struck an beautiful stability of delicate ensemble enjoying with well-placed bursts of fervor. The oboe’s solo had a child-like attraction that gave it a nineteenth-century playroom feeling, and the constructing pleasure within the folk-dance figures was performed with clean, hearty boldness. As my companion remarked, the orchestra blossomed with a stately sound. Mercurio is full of life and sociable – he introduced the work to its ultimate beat whereas concurrently leaping with a fast flip to the viewers to smile and bow.
McDuffie joined to carry out the Brahms Violin Concerto. Before imagining the standard virtuosic rendition (it’s, in any case, an orchestral audition requirement heard commonly in follow rooms), clear your thoughts of any interpretations you would possibly count on. McDuffie threw out custom and determined he would relish each chordal change, each passage, each temper change. He took to coronary heart the ‘Non troppo’ marking of the primary motion, Allegro non troppo, and almost unnoticed the ‘Allegro’. McDuffie captured the depths of sweetness and melancholy that accomplice all through the piece in an unhindered method I’ve not heard earlier than. For the orchestra, it was not a simple interpretation to comply with, however soloist and conductor made for sturdy collaborators – speaking not simply with glances and gestures however with squats, lunges and an entire array of seemingly choreographed actions that stored everybody collectively. McDuffie’s cadenza was free and filled with humor in addition to unafraid to take twentieth-century stylistic and tonal turns, together with a fast tuning of the E-string at one opportune second.
The following two actions had been no much less experimental. While perhaps not everybody’s cup of tea, within the Adagio, McDuffie highlighted the modernist in Brahms by pulling the melody out over uncommon phrase traces that gave a brand new sound to an previous traditional. Was there an excessive amount of rubato? I’d say there was, at occasions, however the pleasure of the expertise was letting McDuffie cleared the path.
The ultimate motion – Allegro giocoso, ma non troppo vivace – was all ‘giocoso’. Plyometric actions returned for each soloist and conductor as they carried the piece as a lot with their our bodies as their palms. Perfection was typically thrown out for the sake of getting a grand previous time. Refreshingly, McDuffie didn’t play the motion like a Scherzo, which many different musicians lean in direction of. Instead, his interpretation learn like a real telling of ‘that time Brahms just let go’ – one thing not typical of this Hamburg native’s reticent persona. McDuffie lingered on the final measures and performed the ultimate 4 notes with supremely lengthy pauses, which he paired with a squint a and smile on the viewers. This was McDuffie’s Brahms and nobody else’s.
The live performance closed with Beethoven’s Fifth. After a barely rocky begin, which one can forgive as that is arguably essentially the most difficult opening to any symphony, the gamers settled in by the second theme. What then unfolded was thrilling, daring and riveting. Mercurio has been an operatic conductor for a lot of his profession and knew the best way to deliver out character, plot, climax and determination within the work. It reminded listeners that Beethoven wrote for opera, and we heard the story advised at each flip – from purposefully naïve lyrical textures within the second motion to the bassoon’s solo, delivered like a personality strutting out on stage, within the third.
By the closing, one envisioned a carnival of humanity on stage – Beethoven’s Fifth exuding each the exhilaration of being alive and the humility of understanding all of it should ultimately finish. Wielding his baton like a baseball bat on the backside of the ninth inning, Mercurio unabashedly tore via the final notes of the symphony and was appropriately greeted with resounding ‘Bravos’ from throughout the corridor.
Mercurio got here again to introduce an encore, which was most welcome as a cooldown after the larger-than-life Beethoven. They performed the easy and marvelous ‘Gabriel’s Oboe’ by Enrico Morricone, with whom the orchestra had a long-standing relationship. Rightly, it highlighted the skills of the orchestra’s principal oboist, and it offered much more materials to an already memorable live performance.
Daniele Sahr