A stirring Beethoven and a memorable Prokofiev Paavo Jarvi and the Royal Concertgebouw
Kurier21 Feb 2023
★★★★★ S. ZOBL
Paavo Järvi is one of those conductors who want one thing above all: the ideal sound. He demonstrated this at the Musikverein with his Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich, of which he will be chief conductor until 2029, and also during his guest performance with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in the Konzerthaus.
Beethoven's Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61 with Lisa Batiashvili as the soloist became an orchestral exploration. The four drumbeats at the beginning are full of promise, the main theme is gentle and soaring with the excellently arranged woodwinds. Transparency, brilliance, beautiful sound in the orchestra surrounded the soloist. The bribed with flawlessness. In the cadenzas (she played Alfred Schnittke's) she reminded her of a coloratura singer, who sang her passages brilliantly, with a polished voice and intonation skills. The orchestral introduction of the slow middle movement turned out to be really stirring. There was something special that made Järvi's recordings of Beethoven's symphonies with the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen sit up and take notice.
Whether Järvi, with Sergei Prokofiev's "Fifth" in B flat major, in times of the Munich Security Conference and the war in Ukraine, invited a kind of self-test as far as music reception is concerned, is a matter of opinion. Järvi relied on a clear, analytical reading and precision. The music was excellent, the nervous string passages exciting and the jolly clarinet in the second movement. The encore, “Valse triste” by Sibelius, then sounded like a commentary.
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Aufwühlender Beethoven und ein denkwürdiger Prokofjew
Paavo Järvi und das Royal Concertgebouw
- Kurier
- ★★★★★ S. ZOBL
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