After conducting the San Francisco Symphony on Saturday evening in a zippy rendition of Carl Maria von Weber's 1823 Overture to Euryanthe, Andrés Orozco-Estrada grabbed a microphone and gave an antic lecture about the musical program and the excellence of San Francisco's symphony. The 48-year-old Colombia-born, Austria-based conductor was filling time while a grand piano was slowly wheeled onstage from the wings because the basement elevator which usually transports the instrument is currently broken.
The piano was for a performance of Mozart's 1777 Piano Concerto No. 9, his first adult masterpiece in the genre. The soloist was the 30-year-old Canadian Jan Lisiecki, who was signed to a recording contract as a young phenom at age 15 with Deutsche Grammophon.
He seems to have been performing around the world ever since, and if his Facebook page is any indication, his schedule looks something like The Amazing Race. (The photo above is Lisiecki enjoying San Francisco's Ocean Beach during last week's heat wave.)
Lisiecki is a technical wizard, and the first movement of the Mozart concerto was thrilling, but in the gorgeous andante middle movement, he reminded me of Víkingur Ólafsson's eccentric rendition of Mozart and Haydn, making the music sound Romantic and effortful rather than Classical and effortless. Still, there was nothing dry or dreary about the performance, and it was a pleasure to encounter Liesecki for the first time, including his encore featuring a wildly idiosyncratic rendition of a Chopin Waltz.
We had prime orchestra seats but a pair of young women arrived at the last minute next to us and one of them promptly started recording the concert on her phone. After gently waving a finger at her to stop, she proceeded to spend the rest of the concert scrolling through her social media. Instead of making a scene or committing murder, we repaired to a top tier balcony for the second half of the program for Dvořák's 1885 Symphony No. 7.
By the composer's usual standards, it's a dark piece and one I had never heard live before. Orozco-Estrada has made a specialty of the work with many of the orchestras he's conducted over the years, recording it with Houston and videotaping it with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony, which you can see on YouTube. The San Francisco Symphony, particularly the heavily featured woodwind section, shone in a wonderful performance.






No comments:
Post a Comment