Saturday 9 February 2013

Lutoslawski festival -  Salonen and Zimerman turn on the style 

Lutoslawski: Musique funebre
Lutoslawski: Piano Concerto
Ravel: Daphnis et Chloe ballet
 

Philharmonia Orchestra
Philharmonia Voices
Esa-Pekka Salonen conductor
Krystian Zimerman piano
 

30 January 2013, Royal Festival Hall, London
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Lutoslawski with Salonen
Lutoslawski has been a particular favourite of mine since I discovered his stunning 3rd Symphony – Beethoven for the late 20th century.  So it is a particular pleasure that Esa-Pekka Salonen and his Philharmonia Orchestra are playing a full tribute to the Polish composer on the 100 year anniversary of his birth in 1913.
 

The first concert of three at the Royal Festival Hall kicked off with the work that grabbed international attention for the composer at the second Warsaw Autumn Festival in 1958.  The Musique funebre has a tone equivalent to Strauss’ Metamorphosen and commemorates the 10th anniversary of the death of Bela Bartok.  It remains an arresting composition and Salonen was a model of restraint, emphasising the subdued and intimate atmosphere it generates. 
 

Lutoslawski and Zimerman performing together
From this followed the much later Piano Concerto of 1988 and we were treated to a typically polished and prepared performance from the work’s dedicatee – Krystian Zimerman.  Lutoslawski first discussed the project with Zimerman in 1976 so it had an extended gestation.   Thinner, often luminous orchestration is coupled with much surprisingly traditional writing for the piano.  Zimerman evoked the sparse, probing opening with the crystalline beauty we have come to expect, and revelled in the passacaglia finale which contains writing of a Lisztian bent.  In between it was possible to imagine that Chopin or Brahms were involved, but Lutoslawksi’s characteristic structural clarity, superb orchestration and magica improvisatory qualities were everywhere evident.  Kissing the score, Zimerman departed the stage after an ideal performance of this fine work.

After such concise, focused brilliance in the first half, it was perhaps unfair to throw out one of Ravel’s most bloated scores.  Fair or not, Daphnis well outstayed its welcome, however brilliantly it was played and sung by the Philharmonia Orchestra and Voices.   The orchestration was at times ravishing of course, but much of the ballet feels like sub- Rimsky-Korsakov and the worldless vocalising of the chorus has not dated well.

Bring on more Lutoslawski!