Queen Elizabeth Hall
Ravel – Le Tombeau de Couperin
Couperin – Concerts royaux (excerpts)
Beethoven – Violin Concerto
in D major, op.61
Jennifer Pike (violin)
Arensky Chamber Orchestra
William Kunhardt (conductor)
Matthew Sharp (actor)
Simon Gethin Thomas
(lighting)
It is an obvious thing to do,
or at least one might hope it would be, to perform Ravel’s Tombeau de Couperin with music from Couperin’s Concerts royaux; the problem is that to do so nowadays is to take
on the ‘authenticity’ Taliban, a task which many, in the teeth of such
vociferous hostility, have decided is no longer worth it. They are wrong, yet
one can understand the reasons for their wariness. After all, even Pierre
Boulez, not a stranger to controversy, once ruefully remarked, concerning
Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos, ‘... even
as I was making my way forward, until about 1978, the specialists were
simultaneously taking over. They were starting to say, “If they’re not played
in the true baroque manner, with baroque instruments, it’s useless to play them
any other way.” Then one isn’t going to play them at all.’ One would have thought it axiomatic that,
in Boulez’s words, ‘A musician approaching an eighteenth-century work
after playing something from the twentieth would have a much broader view than
these eighteenth-century specialists who end up locking themselves in an
antique armoire.’ Alas it has taken longer than anyone, perhaps even Adorno,
might have feared to escape the armoire, a state of affairs compounded by the
culture industry’s compartmentalisation of ‘period’ music as something akin to
so-called ‘costume drama’. Three
cheers, then, to the Arensky Chamber Orchestra, already having made quite a
name for itself in terms of bold programming and bold presentation, for defying
the armoire fatwas!
Anyway, irrespective of
inclement performing conditions, the concert’s the thing. Interspersing
movements from the first, third, and fourth Concerts
royaux with those from Le Tombeau de
Couperin proved an inspired choice. The ‘Prélude’ was swift, fleeting even,
perhaps a reflection of the relatively small forces (strings 6.5.4.4.2) but
perhaps not. The sharp attack and unanimity I have noted on previous occasions
again proved a hallmark of the ACO’s excellent ensemble. William Kunhardt
conducted without the score (though he would use one for Beethoven.) Urgency
was perhaps underlined by the players’ standing to play (save for cellos and
basses). The ‘Prélude’ from the Third Couperin suite was taken, as indeed were
all the Couperin excerpts, with darkened lighting, focused upon the soloists, a
chamber rather than orchestral approach having been decided upon. It was a good
choice to follow the Ravel, not least on account of the continuity of
oboe-playing (here, beguilingly played by Johnny Roberts). Strings, who had
definitely been ‘accompanying’, came into their own in the ensuing ‘Forlane’
from the fourth Concert royal.
Rhythms were nicely turned throughout. Ravel’s ‘Forlane’ was characterised by
freshness, by a spring in its step, rhythmic alertness apparently ‘carried over’
from its Couperin predecessor. The ‘Menuet’ was more relaxed, indeed affectionate,
Kunhardt differentiating it nicely from the previous dance. Harmonic echoes of,
for instance, the Pavane pour une infante
défunte were allowed to speak; rubato was well judged. There was a true
sense of a world – ‘real’ or ‘imaginary’ – lost. The ‘Menuet en trio’ from
Couperin’s first suite had a good degree of give-and-take between parts;
violin, flute, and cello were equal partners in a graceful reading. Strings
again played alone in the ‘Rigaudon’ from the fourth: a catchy reading,
somewhat akin to courtlier Purcell, with especially fine articulation from
Charlotte Maclet’s violin. Ravel’s own ‘Rigaudon’ perhaps suffered a little
from less-than-ideal balance, the brass somewhat dominating the small orchestra.
Otherwise, it was a lively account, with welcome hints of greater languor in
the central section.
Beethoven’s Violin Concerto
followed the interval: a contrast rather than a connection, but no less welcome
for that. Actor Matthew Sharp, dressed as Beethoven, seated at a desk, read the
ever-moving Heiligenstadt Testament (in translation), after which Jennifer Pike,
a former BBC Young Musician of the Year, joined the orchestra onstage. Wind
instruments were naturally more prominent in a small orchestral performance
than they would have been with a full symphony orchestra, and very good they
were too. But there was, from the outset, a febrile intensity to the string
playing too. Kunhardt led a relatively swift, but never hard-driven,
performance of the first movement, Pike proving a bright- and clean-toned
soloist, quite ready to yield where necessary. Ensemble was again excellent
throughout. If the soloist’s intonation were not always perfect, nor were any
such shortcomings other than minor. Certainly, taken as a whole there was a
proper sense of the goodness of composer and music, as heard in the Testament,
and anyone who does not regard Beethoven’s music as concerned with ethics has
no business performing it. Small string forces emphasised the kinship of the
slow movement with chamber music, poised in this case not so very far away from
the Beethoven of the string quartets, whilst woodwind offered a quickening
sense of the world of the outdoor serenade. Pike’s silvery tone brought the
music closer to Mendelssohn than one often hears. The transition to the finale
was very well handled by conductor and orchestra alike; that movement brought
with it more than a faint echo of the Mozartian ‘hunting’ finale, more ebullient
than often, and rather winningly so. Horns and other wind unquestionably sounded
in their element.