Saturday, August 20, 2022

The Israel Symphony Orchestra Rishon LeZion signs out of the 2021-2022 season with "Beethoven/Chopin". Conductor: Dan Ettinger. Guest pianist: Alexander Korsantia

Photo: Miri Shamir

 

Alexander Korsantia (Courtesy A. Korsantia)

Over recent years, there has been much discussion about the programming of symphony concerts and whether we hear too much frequently-performed repertoire without moving outside of the box to hear lesser known- or new works. The audience packing the hall of the Tel Aviv Performing Arts Centre to capacity on August 14th 2022 to attend "Beethoven/Chopin", the Israel Symphony Orchestra Rishon LeZion's final concert for the 2021-2022 season, was proof that the undisputed masterpieces of the Classical and Romantic eras still remain fresh and exciting to the public. Conducted by Dan Ettinger, the orchestra's musical director, and featuring pianist Alexander Korsantia (Georgia), this event was to have taken place in January 2022, but ended up being postponed due to a rising wave of the coronavirus.

 

The concert opened with Frédéric Chopin's Concerto No.2 in F minor Op.21 for piano and orchestra. Actually, the first concerto the composer penned, it was written by the 19-year-old Chopin on his return home to Warsaw from a successful impromptu solo debut in Vienna and completed in the autumn of 1829. From the first moments of the opening movement (Maestoso), the audience is swept up by Korsantia's natural manoeuvring of the movement's exquisite poetic elements, contrasted by moments of dramatic urgency, as the pianist allows the ebb and flow of Chopin's narrative and melodic inventiveness to dictate his personal shaping and nuancing of the music. As to the Larghetto (a forerunner of the nocturnes Chopin would later compose) Korsantia's masterful weaving of its dreamy, embellished, noble phrases was offset by delicate, attentive playing on the part of the orchestra, the movement's contrasting middle section beginning dramatically, with the piano's agitated "comments" placed above tremolo string textures. Korsantia's handling of the final movement's virtuosic passagework served as a means rather than an end, delighting the listener with the freshness and joy of Chopin's mazurka theme, a horn solo introducing the brilliant F major coda. In streamlined teamwork, Ettinger and Korsantia presented the magic of Chopin's lyricism and cantabile melodiousness, his lustrous sonorities and Romantic, pianistic expressiveness. For an encore, the pianist's wistful, relaxed and beautifully measured reading of a Rag by American pianist/composer William Bolcom (b.1938) invited the piece to speak for itself. No new face to Israeli audiences, Alexander Korsantia today resides in Boston, where he is a Professor of Piano on the faculty of the New England Conservatory.

 

For the performance of Ludwig van Beethoven's mammoth Symphony No.3 in E flat major Op.55 "Eroica", Dan Ettinger needed no podium, no baton and no score. We were in for a performance that would have the audience perched at the edge of its seats. From the two defiant opening chords of the first movement, the Rishon LeZion Orchestra punctuated the excitement of the Allegro con brio's shattering dissonances and rhythmic dislocations with luxuriant, soaring, cantabile utterances. Then to Ettinger's solemn and moving recreation of the Marcia funebre, its major middle section and intense fugal section moving back to the funeral subject, now with added poignancy, grief and anger, the coda's reticent, downy final statement of the main theme suggesting resignation, then to build up to an intense climax. With a solo oboe introducing a rustic melody, we are transported to the lightweight, tripping Scherzo, a piece then displaying a gigantic expressive range and challenging horn writing, the sotto voce sections often underscoring no less tension than the movement's heroic utterances. In the Finale, Ettinger and his players entertain the audience with the Allegro molto's pot-pourri - one comprising the suspenseful, the unpredictable and the hearty, all emanating from the rich inventiveness of Beethoven’s imagination - as the bass line develops into a series of variations that climaxes with a slow hymn. As Maestro Ettinger turned to- and moved towards sections and individual players, his close physical proximity to them swept away the cobwebs of routine, putting his own stamp on the revolutionary originality of the “Eroica”, reflecting a work consistently fresh and illuminating, a work so innovative and influential that it was to change the course of music history. 

Maestro Dan Ettinger (Courtesy DE)