Page 336 - Liverpool Philharmonic 22-23 Season Coverage Book
P. 336

doubtless as a practical aid for amateur performances, but nothing springs an orchestral sonority into the 20th century like a piano and it flashed and stabbed its way through
                   the texture like chrome-toothed steel. Meanwhile, the violins fitted a streamlined casing over the spinning, driving jig rhythms. It was a miniature rite of a very English
                   spring: a short ride in a steam-powered machine, and to be honest, I did not see that coming.

                   The Running Set was included in this concert in preparation for a recording: part of Manze’s ongoing series of Vaughan Williams discs with the RLPO, of which he is the
                   principal guest conductor. And no bad thing, either: the Vaughan Williams anniversary year has been noticeably short on major rediscoveries. Where were the headline
                   Proms performances of Dona Nobis Pacem or Sancta Civitas? Why no revivals of Riders to the Sea or The Pilgrim’s Progress? Only the reconstructed Scott of the
                   Antarctic film score seems to have brought anything really new to the party – more on that, hopefully, in a few weeks’ time.
                   But one notable recent development has been the (overdue) acclamation of the Fifth Symphony as a cherished national classic, featuring (in an organ transcription) in the
                   funeral of the late Queen, and toppling even Elgar in an online poll. Manze finished the concert with the Fifth, in a measured, eloquent reading that opened huge hazy vistas
                   inside the Philharmonic Hall. The great ‘Alleluia’ key change at the summit of the Preludio generated the requisite shivers. And at the end of the Romanza, and again at the
                   conclusion of the whole symphony, Manze drew playing of such honeyed, delicate sweetness from the RLPO string section that it felt as if the symphony were expiring in
                   sheer bliss: less transcendence than a spirit of pure benediction. The recording gives only a hint of its sensuous beauty.
                   I had expected to write a lot more about Christof Loy’s new Tosca at English National Opera, but really, it doesn’t need much description. It’s basically a straight, period-
                   appropriate Tosca, attractively designed, and directed for the most part with humanity and theatrical flair. Loy does have one slightly eccentric idea – ghostly figures in
                   18th-century costume stalk about the stage to emphasise the contrast between Scarpia’s repressive ancien régime and the free spirit and vaguely modern costumes of
                   Cavaradossi (Adam Smith), Angelotti (Msimelelo Mbali) and Sinead Campbell-Wallace’s naive, youthful Floria Tosca. Smith spent the opening scene of Act Three in a
                   prison cell – a slightly clumsy imposition.
                   But overall, Loy’s Tosca hits all the right beats, and (spoiler alert) Tosca’s final leap is one of the most convincing that I’ve ever seen. What an actor, indeed! Due to vocal
                   problems, Noel Bouley mimed the role of Scarpia on this second night of the run, while Roland Wood sang, magnificently, from the side. But Smith and Campbell-Wallace
                   were both on glorious voice, rolling it out in long, impassioned lines and easily cresting the swell of Leo Hussain’s ardent, oceanic conducting. With performances like
                   these, this a Tosca worthy of the West End and you can book with confidence, either now (it runs all month) or for the many revivals that Loy’s production will surely
                   receive over the next few years.
                   WRITTEN BYRichard Bratby
   331   332   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341