Halle Orchestra, Bridgewater Hall
Kazushi Ono, conductor of the Hallé’s first
Thursday series concert of the month, was a newcomer to me. He’s already held
the principal conductor’s job at the Lyons opera – one of Kent Nagano’s roles
in times past – and is clearly highly regarded in his native Japan.
It looks as if he knows exactly what he
wants and how to get it. We had Schubert and Beethoven first: in both cases
with string forces where first and second violins balanced one another in
numbers, and – especially in Beethoven’s Piano
concerto no. 2, where the total strings were fewer than 40 – light enough
in the lower end of the spectrum to ensure a neat, clean, energetic sound.
Schubert’s Rosamunde Overture (not actually written for the Rosamunde play to
which he supplied highly familiar incidental music, but never mind) was beautifully
paced and unfolded in its satisfyingly conventional shape. Maybe the strings
could have been a tad more precise in following his beat at first, but that
issue never raised its head again.
Soloist for the Beethoven concerto was Paul
Lewis – a master of his craft who needs no introduction. He is poised,
delightful in articulation, ready to highlight the touches of whimsy (such as
the intriguing tum-ti-tum decorations of the first movement’s main theme,
played with charming insouciance) and the moments of passion (such as the
little explosion in the solo part towards the end of the second movement), and
his playing of that slow movement was simple and unashamedly lyrical but never without
its gentle forward momentum.
That Adagio became the spiritual highspot
of his interpretation, and with Kazushi Ono’s help sustained its relaxed sense
of reverie from beginning to end. The finale had its full quota of high spirits
including teasing nuances from Paul Lewis whenever he had the chance to include
them.
The second part of the concert was very
different – the orchestra increased to full strings strength and all the
required wind and percussion, for one thing – presenting Shostakovich’s Symphony no. 10. It’s almost a calling
card for the Hallé: they recorded it for Skrowaczewski and have played it
wonderfully for Sir Mark Elder. The opening clarinet solo has sounded amazing
in the past but surely never as gentle and distant a voice as it became in the
hands of Sergio Castelló Lopez – and this was a performance in which all the
solo roles were constantly eloquent, among them a characterful reading of the
principal bassoon role from guest Paul Boyes and gorgeous oboe playing from Stéphane
Rancourt.
I admired the swaying but bleakly
pessimistic mood Kazushi Ono obtained in the third main theme of the first
movement, and the hurtling juggernaut he initiated in the second. Solos were
again most distinguished in the slow movement, golden horn calls heralding the
dawn of optimism.
The finale, as always, leaves you wondering
whether you have quite ‘got it’. Shostakovich in exuberant voice is always a
hair’s breadth away from Shostakovich the satirist or the clown, and Ono’s
tempo for the jollifications seemed as energetic as the one he chose for the
grim second movement. Precision in the playing – the orchestra led by Lyn
Fletcher – was unimpeachable, but was it all a shade too much for sincerity to come
through? The reception showed that the listeners loved it.
Kazushi Ono (credit Miyoshi Eisuke)
Paul Lewis (credit Sara Porter)
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