LOS ANGELES — That Gustavo Dudamel began his tenure as the music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic
with a free concert last Saturday night at the Hollywood Bowl, a
multicultural community love fest, will always be a point of pride for
citizens here.
Mr. Dudamel’s much-anticipated official inaugural came on Thursday
night at Walt Disney Concert Hall, a formidable program with Mahler’s
First Symphony and the premiere of a new work by John Adams.
This was a black-tie gala, complete with a red- carpet procession of
celebrities and patrons, and a South American-themed post-concert dinner
in a makeshift tent set up outside the hall, smack in the middle of
South Grand Avenue.
For all of Mr. Dudamel’s innate abilities to
connect with audiences and inspire young people, he was hired to conduct
a major American orchestra. The 10-minute ovation that erupted at the
end of the Mahler made clear that supporters of the Los Angeles
Philharmonic are thrilled with their new 28-year-old music director. But
this was an exceptional and exciting concert by any standard.
Making
a telling artistic statement, Mr. Dudamel began his tenure conducting
the premiere of the new Adams piece, “City Noir,” a bustling, complex
35-minute work in three movements: the final panel in a triptych of
orchestral works inspired by what Mr. Adams calls the “California
experience,” its “landscape and its culture.” (The first two are “El
Dorado” and “The Dharma at Big Sur,” a violin concerto.)
The piece was suggested, Mr. Adams has written, by the richly
evocative books on California’s social history by Kevin Starr,
especially a chapter called “Black Dahlia,” which explores the sassy,
shoddy and sensational era of the 1940s and ’50s, which gave rise to
film noir. It is not easy to evoke the milieu of an era in music. But
this score was also inspired by jazz-inflected American symphonic music
of the 1920s through the ’50s, from Gershwin to Copland to Bernstein,
something that is a lot easier to evoke.
Mr. Adams does so
brilliantly in this searching, experimental de facto symphony. The first
movement, “The City and Its Double,” begins with a wash of orchestral
sound, murmuring motifs and rhythmic shards. Scurrying figurations break
out and whirl around, getting stuck in place one moment, spiraling off
frenetically the next. Is this harmonically astringent be-bop or weird
echoes of a Baroque toccata?
Eventually the violins begin a
winding, sometimes aimless-sounding episode of fitful, churning lines.
Mr. Adams has become a master at piling up materials in thick yet lucid
layers. Moment to moment the music is riveting. Yet, as in some other
Adams scores, I found it hard to discern the structural spans and
architecture of this one.
The pensive second movement, “The Song
Is for You,” with its hazy sonorities, slithering chords, sultry jazzy
solos and undulant riffs, does somehow convey California. The third
movement, “Boulevard Night,” begins languorously but soon erupts, all
jagged, quirky and relentless. Call it “The Rite of Swing.”
Mr.
Dudamel, gyrating on the podium and in control at every moment, drew a
cranked-up yet subtly colored performance of this challenging score from
his eager players. He seemed so confident dispatching this metrically
fractured work that I was drawn into the music, confident that a pro was
on the podium.
Like Mr. Dudamel’s Beethoven
Ninth at the Hollywood Bowl, the Mahler performance was not what you
might expect from a young conductor. For all the sheer energy of the
music-making, here was a probing, rigorous and richly characterized
interpretation, which Mr. Dudamel conducted from memory. The suspenseful
opening of the first movement, with its sustained tones and cosmic
aura, had uncannily calm intensity. But when bird calls and genial folk
tunes signaled the awakening of nature, the music had disarming breadth
and guileless tenderness. And Mr. Dudamel was all ready-set-go when
Mahler’s wildness broke out.
In the rustic second movement, he
captured the music’s beery, galumphing charm, and milked the Viennese
lyricism with the panache of a young Bernstein. He and his players
uncovered the slightly obsessive quality of the songful slow movement,
with its droning repetition of tonic-dominant bass patterns. And he
viscerally conveyed the fits and starts of the mercurial finale,
building to a brassy climactic fanfare almost scary in its ecstasy.
The
musicians were with him all the way, though the playing was rough at
times, with patchy string tone and scrappy execution. For all the
important accomplishments, of Mr. Dudamel’s predecessor, Esa-PekkaSalonen,
he was not the most gifted orchestra builder. The vitality of the
playing was always inspiring. No one wants the slick virtuosity that
some orchestras are content with. Still, Mr. Dudamel and his players may
have work to do.
At the end, as a confetti shower of Mylar
strips fell from the ceiling, Mr. Dudamel returned to the stage again
and again. But he never took a solo bow from the podium. Instead, he
stood proudly with his players on stage. (By Anthony Tommasini / Published: October 9, 2009/ New York Times)
Gracias por tu apreciacion por Gustavo Dudamel.
ResponderEliminar