Gomyo after the Sibelius Violin Concerto. With Hindoyan looking on.
Program
Can You See? (2023) by Loggins-Hull (b. 1982).
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in D minor, Op. 47 (1902-04, rev. 1905) by Sibelius.
Symphony No. 7 in D minor, Op. 70 (1884-85) by Dvorak (1841-1904).
It's not often that we go to a NY Phil concert on Wednesdays. Today's tickets were offered to subscribers for 40% off, and the program is quite interesting. I always enjoy listening to Sibelius's violin concerto, and Dvorak's Seventh is a lot less popular than his Eighth and Ninth, so it would be interesting to understand if there are any underlying reasons for that.
One reason I didn't consider this concert earlier was the piece by Allison Loggins-Hull, who is an artist-in-residence with NJ Symphony. I have two prior encounters with her work, including the piece performed tonight, and ended up scratching my head afterwards. I described Can You See as her attempt to deconstruct the national anthem the way Picasso deconstructs a human figure. I can sometimes make sense of Picasso, but couldn't do it this evening even for a second listening. Actually it sounded all new to me, such was the impression the piece left on me just a year ago. The national anthem is an exciting tune, what with bombs blasting in the air and all that, this piece just drones on. (My blog entry indicates there was a passage where the violas hit the strings with a stick; didn't notice that today.) It is a relatively short piece, and Loggins-Hull went on stage at the end of the performance.
While other interpretations are possible (or none), to me, however, Sibelius's violin concerto should capture the feelings of a violinist who fails to reach the highest echelons of the art. Per today's Program Notes, Sibelius didn't start his violin studies until he was 14. With inadequate teachers and problems with stage fright, being a virtuoso simply wasn't in the cards for him. (I started taking violin lessons at around 11, in a couple of years someone at my school won a Hong Kong competition with Wieniawski's Second Violin Concerto, he was perhaps 15 at that time. Even he quit playing the violin.)
Gomyo was born in Japan, and is in her forties. This was my first encounter with her. In general, she played well, with superb technique. Every now and then there would be some intonation problems, to be expected as the pieces calls for quite a few rapid leaps in pitch. Overall, it was enjoyable, but did not convey the sentiments I was looking for. Per Gemini, she performs on a Stradivarius.
For encore, she played a piece written by a friend. Google says it is "Changes" written by Samuel Adams.
One notices quite a few entries in this blog on Dvorak's Seventh Symphony. Despite that, it still sounded new tonight. Per the Program Notes, this symphony was inspired by Brahms's Third, and was premiered in London where Dvorak was very popular. Indeed the work was commissioned by the Royal Philharmonic. His own reaction to the premiere was that it turned "splendidly, really splendidly." He also claimed that - after he edited out about 40 measures from the Symphony's second movement - that "there is not a superfluous note in the work." All I can say is that Dvorak didn't realize how the 7th would be eclipsed by his later two symphonies.
We were in Hoboken this afternoon, so stuck around and took the bus into the City.