It was an inspired choice for the
Australian World Orchestra to finish
their current Australian season by combining with students of the
Australian
National Academy of Music to perform
Messiaen’s
Turangal’la Symphonie
under the baton of Simone Young. The result was exhilarating for the
audience as I’m sure it also was for the ANAM students.
The work was Messiaen’s first international commission and, with the
luxury of no constraints on orchestration and duration, he set about
cramming as many of the musical techniques that he had so far developed into
a work of over an hour, containing ten movements and calling for an
orchestra of at least 100 players. The orchestra forces include triple
woodwind and expanded percussion, eschewing only harp and timpani from the
typical large orchestral complement. In addition, there are major solo parts
for piano and ondes Martenot. The ondes Martenot is an electronic instrument
(sometimes confused with the Theremin as featured in
Bernard Hermann’s film
scores), and it is a pity the extensive program notes did not explain the
differing functions of the variously-shaped loudspeakers which are integral
to its timbre.
The Australian World Orchestra consists of top flight Australian
orchestral players from across the world’s orchestras. Some of these
international musicians such as trombonist Michael Mulcahy (currently a
member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra) are no strangers to Hamer Hall.
The ANAM students and alumna were interspersed amongst their experienced AWO
colleagues and would no doubt have learnt much form the rehearsal and
performance experience. Although one might have been expected to see
’bumpers’ (additional players to take the load of the principals in less
exposed sections) we were not able to detect any. All the more credit to the
professionalism of the mixed forces
Timothy Young on piano led the ‘gamelan’ of tuned percussion (including a
keyboard glockenspiel) and performed the fiendishly difficult cadenzas and
flourishes in a masterful fashion. Jacob Abela on the ondes Martnot showed
that he has mastered the mysteries of this wondrous machine. The balance of
the ondes with the rest of the orchestra, the degree of vibrato, and the
exact timbres chosen can make a significant difference between various
performances of this work, and though not all would regard the choices made
by Abela and the conductor in this respect as being the optimum, equally
many may well have found them just right. It was also interesting to see
both these soloists using electronic displays in place of sheet music, and
judging by the activity around Australian music circles, it won’t be long
before the ‘paperless pit’ becomes more widespread.
The work presents many challenges of delicate ensemble and solo
work and, on the whole, these were met with admirable flair across the range
from the depths of (Professor) Timothy Dunin’s
double bass pizzicato through
to the assured heights of student Eliza Shephard’s
piccolo. The occasional
and minor instances of loose ensemble did nothing to detract from the
overall performance.
Holding together this massive work with a mixed force of players requires
an extraordinary conductor, and Australia has such a conductor in Simone
Young. From beginning to end she was completely in control of Messiaen’s
soundscapes, the moir’ patterns of his overlapping rhythms, his piling of
layer on layer as a structural device and the logistics of harnessing
ensemble playing across a large footprint of stage in exposed textures where
often a woodblock has no place to hide.
Perhaps Simone Young’s attention to detail and musicality was best
witnessed in the two huge climaxes in which the long-held orchestral chord
is swelled with untuned percussion before being abruptly terminated. Many
self-indulgent conductors will swell this chord for an inordinately long
time before cutting it off and leaving just the ugly sound of untuned
percussion jangle hanging in the air. Young on the other hand crafted the
exact time to finish so that the f sharp minor chord was still evident but
being transported to another dimension by the percussion wash.
It was a privilege to witness two generations of musicians successfully
tackle this challenging work under an outstanding conductor. With any luck,
this performance may also have helped swell the ranks of a new generation of
concert goers.
BL
|
Copyright © 1995 - 2024
White Hat.
|
Related sheet music: