AN
all-Mozart programme, with the mega-talented Jean-Efflam Bavouzet as soloist in
two piano concertos, was always going to be a highlight of Manchester
Camerata’s winter season.
It was also
the final appearance in the Manchester
series by music director Gábor Takács-Nagy, whose personal inspiration always
seems to lift the Camerata musicians to outstanding playing and imaginative
insight. And the presence of microphones in the Royal Northern
College concert hall
suggested that here we might have the makings of another CD to match the
five-star-earning one of Haydn concertos by the same personnel.
You might
have expected the little string works that served as foils to the two concertos
to be approached with slightly less care and devotion. But from the first notes
of Mozart’s Symphony no. 1 (written by an eight-year-old, for goodness sake!)
it was clear that was not the case.
With
everyone bar cellos and basses standing, rather than sitting down, the music was
lovingly presented, with spritely energy and a huge variety of tone and
articulation. The central movement was a magical – and, briefly, passionate –
nocturne, and the finale amazed with vigour and life.
The same
qualities were there in the Divertimento in B flat K137. Gábor Takács-Nagy goes
a long way beyond the authenticists’ concepts of ‘rhetoric’ in classical style,
and even if it’s not the way Mozart might have heard it, his approach makes
fascinating listening now.
What of the
concertos? The wind players were placed centre-stage, with the strings, still
mainly standing, enfolding them around.
Jean-Efflam
Bavouzet, by now a favourite with Manchester
audiences through his appearances at the Bridgewater Hall with both the
Philharmonia and BBC Philharmonic, needed no introduction – his playing was
fluent, illuminating and perfectly judged (he melts into the background when
others have the spotlight).
For me the
greatest fascination came in Piano Concerto no. 17 K453, where there were
lovely oboe and bassoon solos in the slow movement to match the piano’s
eloquent melodies, and piano cadenzas where Bavouzet did his own near-jazzy,
almost-Ravelian thing, to take Mozart’s boldness a few stages further. The
finale was like a Magic Flute scene in instrumental terms.
Piano
Concerto no. 18 K456 was equally expertly done, and Bavouzet and Takács-Nagy
between them made its variations turn into a dialogue of wrath and
plaintiveness to compare with the slow movement in Beethoven’s fourth. Cadenzas
this time were pretty strictly from the book, but none the less appealing. And
he gave us two minutes of Massenet as an encore, to prove he could get a big
sound out of that Yamaha piano, too.
*****
Robert
Beale
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