Kahchun Wong’s concert with the Hallé was a really interesting one – in the end, not so much for what it had appeared to offer on paper, but for what it gave in practice.
The paper interest was a UK premiere: Sofia
Gubaidulina’s The Wrath of God, written in 2019, an 18-minute piece for
very large orchestra (four Wagner tubas as well as four horns, two bass
trombones, two tubas and a lot of percussion). It’s about the day of judgment,
and suitably scary. It’s very loud a lot of the time, though there are
beautiful and delicately mysterious softer passages too, one for strings and
gong, one for strings and solo horn, followed by clarinet, piccolo and
glockenspiel, then solo violin. Those I appreciated: but the predominant impression
was that this somewhat episodic piece keeps making you think it’s all over,
then showing you that it’s not.
The remaining ingredients in the programme
were mainstream 20th century music. Britten’s Serenade for Tenor,
Horn and Strings featured the peerless and extraordinary voice of Ian
Bostridge, alongside the Hallé’s principal horn, Laurence Rogers. Between them
(and Kahchun Wong) they gave the lovely song cycle about evening and night with
many a dramatic twist. Bostridge frequently uses his voice in a
quasi-instrumental way, with intensive emphasis on some notes and lines: in the
Elegy (Blake’s “O Rose, though art sick!” and Dirge (the anonymous “Lyke-Wake
Dirge”), particularly (the latter has its own evocation of the day of judgment,
so that made plenty of sense). Rogers matched him for expression and played the
virtuosic part with consummate skill. And in the final Sonnet (Jonson’s “Hymn”,
to the Moon) we heard more of a kind of portamento in the Bostridge voice on
rising phrases that seems to carry a frisson of dread, even in the most re-assuring
music. Never a dull moment with these artists.
Shostakovich’s Symphony no. 5 is
probably the favourite among his entire set and very much a repertoire work for
symphony orchestras now. The challenge for any conductor, I think, is to catch
some sense of ambiguity in it, to set against the clearly tuneful, attractive
and agony-to-ectasy journey that it appears to be on the surface. Kahchun Wong
did that very effectively: in one sense he dramatized it a bit more than others
might (in the first and last movements), but the main characteristics of his
interpretation were an assured and idiomatic approach to its rhythms, a peak of
intensity which made the impassioned Largo, the third of its four movements,
the unforgettable emotional heart of the piece, and a highly strategic change
of tempo in the finale (beginning with the horn solo) that brought a huge
weight of sadness into the midst of the triumphalism and ensured that stolidity
persisted to its end, sound and clamour notwithstanding. It’s a way of
conducting that would have been second nature to the great maestros of the
first half of the 20th century – the time this music was born – and gives
a sense of proportion and shape that are impossible to replicate by any other
means.
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