First review: Bad blood in Birmingham

First review: Bad blood in Birmingham

Orchestras

norman lebrecht

April 18, 2024

Last night’s conflicted concert is reviewed on Midlands Classical Music by Norman Stinchcombe:

CBSO at Symphony Hall ★★★★
Did the CBSO’s chief executive Emma Stenning attend this concert? One hopes so because she would have been able to see the early fruits of the silliest of her new innovations. The orchestra and soloist Ian Bostridge were about a quarter of the way through Britten’s ‘Les Illuminations’ when the tenor motioned to conductor Gergely Madaras, raised his hand and halted the performance. He addressed a small group in the audience who had been filming him on their mobile phones. “Their lights are shining directly in my eyes – it’s very distracting,” he said. “Would you please put your phones down.” A performance by one of the finest British singers of the last fifty years, and a world-renowned interpreter of Britten, was interrupted by a handful of intellectually challenged mobile-obsessed dimwits. Their antics are positively encouraged by the orchestra’s administrators who print this in the concert programme: “We are very happy for you to take photographs and short video clips at our concerts, but please refrain from recording the whole performance. We’d love you to share them with us @TheCBSO.” Perhaps Stenning will castigate Bostridge for encroaching on the liberty of the officially-sanctioned mobile movie makers? One feels that anything is possible under this barmy new dispensation.

That hiatus apart this was a really engaging performance of Britten’s song cycle where in the opening ‘Fanfare’ Bostridge proclaimed that, “I alone hold the key to this savage parade”. So he did, opening the doors to a succession of the poet Rimbaud’s hallucinatory, cryptic visions. The work demands immense versatility from the soloist – a series of brief sharply etched character roles – with Bostridge in turn languorous, epicene, conspiratorial, delirious and declamatory. For a tall slender reed of a man he can be surprisingly stentorian. Britten uses the string orchestra as musical partners not mere accompanists as writes dazzling for them – as he did in the Frank Bridge variations – and the CBSO seized their opportunities. Particularly succulent was a passage where the leader serenaded, accompanied by cellos strummed like guitars and finger-plucked basses.

The Icelandic composer Anna Thorvaldsdottir’s music falls into three categories: Apocalyptic as in the impressively monumental ‘Catamorphosis’ given its UK premiere by the CBSO in 2022; Atmospheric, suitable soundtracks for the ‘Alien’ film franchise, like ‘Metacosmos’ heard here in 2023; Noodling, where nothing happens very slowly – sadly ‘Dreaming’ was a prime example of this. String susurrations, percussion stroked and banged and a closing climactic moment when Eduardo Vassallo scraped and tapped on his cello. He got a round of applause for that which indicates how exciting the previous sixteen minutes were.

Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No.1 ‘Winter Daydreams’ was once neglected but has become more popular in recent years. There have been fine CBSO performances under Andris Nelsons and Ben Gernon but this one from Madaras was possibly the best. It’s a youthful work, brimming over with enthusiasm, profligate with themes, occasionally prolix and in need of nips and tucks. But with the CBSO in sparkling form urged on by Madaras its shortcomings were overlooked and its virtues displayed: the opening winter landscape frozen as if by a magic spell; the Adagio’s gorgeous long-breathed melody; the scherzo’s dances looking forward to the great ballets. Best of all was the finale, the theme ponderously slow and sepulchral in the basses, then speeded up and embracing the orchestral in full cry. The bass drum and cymbals added a brazen, possibly vulgar touch, but I found it utterly irresistible.

Norman Stinchcombe

Comments

  • John Kelly says:

    Encouraged to film segments. Utterly imbecilic.

  • Tricky Sam says:

    How does the British musician’s union feel about this?

    • Christopher Morley says:

      Absolutely! What is the MU’s stance on these shenanigans?

      • IC225 says:

        I don’t think they’d be encouraging it if it wasn’t covered by the players’ collective media agreement: the MU would have shut it down instantly otherwise.

        However, it is still illegal to distribute unlicensed recordings of copyrighted works online so if anyone filmed the first half of this concert and then posted it on social media (and it seems that they are being all-but encouraged to do this), they would be open to legal action from the copyright holder.

  • David Pollak says:

    It’s really quite simple: no phones, as at the Wigmore Hall. I support Bostridge. The screens on the damned phones are distracting for other audience members too.

  • Chris Eckersley says:

    Three cheers for Ian Bostridge!
    The CBSO is in enough trouble (financial not artistic) and it’s now looking like the mad policies of the new management have succeeded in alienating the performers as well as the previously loyal audience.

  • Donna Conspiracy says:

    Huzzah for Norman Stinchcombe! We need more of his ilk and fewer Tim Ashleys

  • Tomos says:

    The idea behind is presumably to attract young audiences, but there’s no evidence to support this notion. Youngsters might take a few selfies in the foyer if they have dressed up for the occasion… but in my experience the people taking photos and short videos at the most inopportune moments during performances are the over 60s, never the under 30s.

    • ML says:

      Tomos is correct. All the under 30s I’ve taken to concerts think that filming of the artists or in the auditorium is what “old folk” do and rather embarrassing. They are however happy to take photos with friends and family in the foyer if it has nice interiors, or outside the building.

      If they want to attract more young audiences, they should offer more concerts that start earlier and finish earlier on weeknights, discounts for under 30s, and have the musicians or orchestra staff create their own short videos specially for putting on social media.

  • Jonathan Z says:

    If I were about to appear with the CBSO I would ask my agent to check how this point is covered in my contract. I would also insist that an announcement is made to the audience pre performance banning photos.

  • Peter says:

    At VSO last month, it was no phones.
    One appeared and an attendant stepped forward immediately. Tapped the idiot on the shoulder and it was turned off.
    I power down completely so as not to risk it – not just sound off.
    Exception – I often film a bit of curtain call and circulate it to family and friends. This seems to be ok in most places

  • Chris says:

    Several of the prog bands I’ve seen in the last year or so have asked for the audience to turn off the bright light which is, I think, the flash, as it is very distracting when it shines in the eyes. I don’t know why it’s becoming more common: I wonder if there have been changes to phone design which means it happens more often?

  • Raymond Cox says:

    I have attended CBSO concerts for many years. I will attend in the future if and when these new policies by the management are withdrawn.

  • horbus rohebian says:

    This obsessive need to film everything combined with an inability to survive forty or so minutes without a drink. Ye Gods – what kind of world are we living in!? The CBSO management should ditch their ludicrous permission to film and drink immediately

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