Some damned cause for joy in Brum

Some damned cause for joy in Brum

Orchestras

norman lebrecht

April 14, 2024

The news from Birmingham has been so grim this year – the city’s bankrupt, all arts subsidies are cancelled and the orchestra’s being run by a wokie amateur, to name a few. However, the CBSO chorus has something to celebrate and we thought you should hear about it:

Exclusive review from Midlands Music Reviews:

 

CBSO at Symphony Hall ★★★★★

In 1974 the CBSO Chorus, formed just four months earlier, performed their first concert. It was a testing one too, Berlioz’s ‘Damnation of Faust’ under the orchestra’s French conductor Louis Fremaux. Berlioz makes huge demands on his choral forces requiring them not just to sing but also to act in character. In the work’s two hour span their roles include peasants lustily enjoying the advent of Spring, solemn Easter celebrants, roistering drunks, students and soldiers, gnomes, sylphs and will o’ the wisps. At the work’s climax they take both sides of the theological divide: the chorus of demons in Pandemonium, in Berlioz’s invented infernal language, and a heavenly host wafting the soul of Marguerite to heaven. Their debut performance was a triumph and, no surprises here, so was this one under Kazuki Yamada.

Symphony Hall looks especially resplendent when the Chorus is on duty and here they were joined by the Tenors and Basses from The Hallé Choir. They showed tremendous bite and vigour in the Auerbach’s wine cellar scene but also humour in their mock ‘Amen’, first intoned in a nasal mocking whinny – accompanied by a ripe and redolent raspberry from then tuba – and then in a grand, full-throated straight rendition. Crucial details were observed: in the Easter Hymn where their first ‘Christ has Risen!’, was muted in wonder, the second exultant and soaring. The ladies sounded terrified when almost being mown down by Faust and Mephistopheles’ hell-bound horses, and supernally radiant in heaven. It was a coup-de-theatre when they were joined by the CBSO Children’s Chorus and CBSO Youth Chorus – solemnly entering down the choir stairs – with Miku Yasukawa, as the Celestial Voice, spotlit in the lower circle. All credit to the work by Chorus Director Simon Halsey and Associate Chorus Director Julian Wilkins.

Berlioz’s phantasmagoric opera for the theatre-of-the-mind also needs a quartet of excellent soloists.. Pene Pati was a resplendent Faust, his tenor voice combining lyricism and elegance in ‘Merci, doux crépuscule’, but with the power and vocal reserves for ‘Nature immense’. The mezzo-soprano Grace Durham was a radiant Marguerite, her final “Ah” of the ‘King of Thule’ expressing a world of longing in a sighed syllable, eloquently accompanied by Adam Röhmer’s solo viola. Durham conveyed the emotional desolation of ‘D’amour l’ardente flamme’ – a heartbreaking final ‘Hélas!” – and a stroke of genius by Berlioz to accompany her with cor anglais (Rachael Pankhurst) the orchestra’s most melancholy instrument. If Jonathan Lemalu (Brander) sounded below his best, the Argentine bass Nahuel di Pierro was a devilishly fine Mephistopheles – hands in pockets, smiling sardonically, like a gambler with loaded dice, a suavely infernal master of ceremonies. His ‘Un puce gentile’ and mocking ‘moral song’ ferociously biting and sardonic, while ‘Voici des roses’ was satanically seductive. Yamada and the CBSO provided stupendous support: the swaggering Hungarian March, lilting minuet for the will o’ the wisps, thrilling ride to the abyss and cataclysmic arrival in Hell just some of the highlights.

Norman Stinchcombe 

Comments

  • Robin Smith says:

    I agree with this review entirely. A red letter day for all the artists. The distressing thing was the vast number of unsold seats. This should have been a sell out (including the Grand Tier).

    • Tom says:

      Many who are classical music friendly, even if they took piano lessons as a child or played in a school band, are unlikely to come across Berlioz’ music unless they are regular symphony goers. The situation would be a little better if his overtures were still played.

      • Robert says:

        Yes, the marketing and PR need to really shout about how brilliant the concert and repertoire is in advance, and why. How else will people know

    • Al says:

      Could be that one reason is the cost of tickets which is now becoming unaffordable for some of the regular audience

  • Kingfisher says:

    Such a great sing for a Chorus – fun all the way.

  • Longlivefaust says:

    Maybe that ‘wokie amateur’ is doing something right then

  • Robert says:

    I agree, this was a truly special concert. Brilliantly cast and incredibly exciting throughout. Kazuki Yamada is a gift and the CBSO is a treasure.

  • Lloyd Allington says:

    I agree completely. I was there in 1974 and there last night. There were stratospherically exciting moments and Kazuki is a genius. I also agree re the unsold seats. Worrying. Bostridge has sold even fewer next week. We must pull in more punters – but let’s hope the blundering CEO doesn’t see it is more excuses for gimmicks. She would do well to listen to this excellent podcast from a bright young CBSO supporter – this is brilliant, intelligent and imaginative. Oh, if only this young woman that he interviews were i/c at the CBSO:

    https://youtu.be/WHxnyzKnxcI?si=SOMqqCFKyNdJ6BQp

    • IC225 says:

      Programming is a dark art. The big Berlioz choral works rarely sell well. Then with Bostridge you’ve got a contemporary work by a composer with a difficult name (it might sound ludicrous, but this really does have an effect at the box office) and a not-particularly Britten song cycle (but not the Serenade). It’d take more than Bostridge (who’s really more of a favourite with the cognoscenti than a household name) and Tchaikovsky’s fifth-most-popular symphony with an unknown (in Birmingham) conductor to lift that over the mark.

      Of course many concerts are programmed each season on the assumption that they won’t break even (their costs being covered by the ones that do); still, as you say, it’s a pity because people are missing great things.

      • Lloyd Allington says:

        Dear IC225 – I completely agree. The concert next week is not great programming tbh – and one accepts that orchestras cannot keep playing the Pathetique symphony (or whatever) but yes – people are not going to turn out in shedloads for Les Illuminations and Tchaik 1. I hope the programmers for next year’s season have taken this on board – though it is probably too late now. And it is important to encourage and promote new music – but if it is about an orchestra’s survival… It is also worth saying that the CBSO website is pretty ordinary: you’d think that they’d have glorious front page pictures of the full monty in Symphony Hall, with footage of the orchestra playing in full swing: a no-brainer. But no. A bland yellow colour with one player pictured. Compare it with other sites… I have remonstrated about this with the admin people, but it is pointless, of course…. They know best.

        • Sammy J says:

          The composer “with a difficult name” is the Icelandic composer Anna Thorvaldsdottir, who is one of the most exciting and respected composers of her generation. The CBSO is renowned for its interesting programming such as this. How can we better let more audiences know that the music of less popular works, or unfamiliar composers, is going to be fantastic in concert (even if they have not heard of it, or the names are indeed difficult?)

        • George W says:

          They probably do. How many are there in the marketing team? 5? Average 5 years experience each – 25 years of experience doing the exact art of arts marketing. They probably do know better than us.

      • Izzie says:

        Gergely Madaras has conducted CBSO a few times before, but yes probably not a household name.

    • jbb says:

      I too was there in 1974. Louis Fremaux was a wonderful Berlioz interpreter. Recently a radio recording of the CBSO performance of Damnation with Fremaux at the Proms was posted on youtube giving a great reminder of the (seemingly forgotten) quality of the CBSO at that time. That youtube post has now disappeared, sadly.
      I don’t go to the CBSO much now largely because of their repertoire, which I find uninspiring.

  • Victor Ellams says:

    I also attended the concert on Saturday a stunning evening from the orchestra and chorus plus excellent soloists including Pene Pati the much in demand tenor who was a wonderfully lyric and thrilling Faust
    I agree thus should have been sold out
    For those who want to re live the event it’s broadcast on radio 3 this Wed and on BBC sounds

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