Monteverdi
 

 
 
 

  

Reviews

Financial Times

LSO/Gardiner, Barbican, London (9 Feb 2010)

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Here was an irony. Just as the period-instrument Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment has embarked on a Beethoven symphony cycle with various conductors on the South Bank, so John Eliot Gardiner – one of the first conductors to perform and record “authentic” Beethoven – is bringing his own cycle to a close with the London Symphony Orchestra on traditional instruments at the Barbican.


It has taken a year for Gardiner’s cycle to run its course. Twelve months on, and with a European tour playing Beethoven just behind them, Gardiner and the LSO have finally reached the last two concerts in the series.


Whatever else happened on the long journey, they have certainly not lost their energy. At Sunday’s concert the First Symphony positively exploded into life. So far from bringing period decorum with him, Gardiner had the trumpets blazing and the timpani thundering. Beethoven may have been flexing his claws like a lion cub in this early symphony, but the playfulness of the finale here was of the roughest kind, red in tooth and claw.


From there to the Ninth Symphony was not such a big leap as one might expect it to be. Gardiner’s performance of the Ninth was in the same vein. Head down, concentration keyed up to maximum, the performers set out into the symphony at a tremendous lick and never faltered. This was a single-minded assault on Olympus, at times threatening to batter the audience into submission, but at least its ambition was always there to hear. In the slow movement Gardiner’s swift tempo was well chosen, for he knows that this is music that must speak in complete sentences, and in the finale the sheer helter-skelter speed could hardly fail to set the pulse racing.


The evening was distinguished by some detailed work from the LSO. The bass, Vuyani Mlinde, set the “Ode to Joy” off to a fine start, decently supported by Rebecca Evans, Wilke te Brummelstroete and Steve Davislim, and the Monteverdi Choir was as thrilling as ever. The cycle ended last night with the “Pastoral” Symphony; if Gardiner was in the same hell-raising mood then, the storm scene should have been quite something.


RICHARD FAIRMAN


www.ft.com/cms/s/2/148d935a-149e-11df-9ea1-00144feab49a.html


Rehearsal, Kirche St Jakob, Köthen (2004)
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