Symphony Hall, Boston, MA. First Balcony Center (Seat E7, $132).
Program
Day Night Day by Tarkianinen (b. 1985).
Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16 by Grieg (1843-1907).
Symphony No. 9 in E minor, Op. 95, From the New World by Dvorak (1841-1904).
Tickets for this concert were purchased back in September last year as a 3-concert subscription. We picked this because it would be a chance to see Lang Lang, and both the Grieg and Dvorak pieces would be great to listen to, especially for a young concert-goer like Emmie, who would attend with us together with her dad.
The piece Day Night Day, by the Finnish composer Outi Tarkianinen, was commissioned by Berlin Philharmonic, Boston Symphony, and Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra. It had its US premiere last week, also at Symphony Hall. (Its world premiere was in Berlin, and I assume it was also performed in Finland prior.) As far as I can tell, the tone poem we heard today has its roots in the opera "Day of Night" Tarkianinen had composed earlier. The Program Notes describes the piece as being about "the northern light and ice ..." And there are two references to two Sami melodies. Tarkianinen, when she came on stage to introduce her piece, also mentioned the French Horns as introducing the second melody.
The piece was reasonably easy to listen to, being short at 7 or 8 minutes undoubtedly helped. One can imagine into the music northern lights and other arctic happenings. A few years ago we visited Northern Norway, including a Sami heritage museum where native songs were sung (we were also served elk burger). We did some ice fishing and dog sledding. This was in January, and the only light was reflection off the atmosphere. It would not take a lot of imagination to map these into the music.
When we visited a Sami Heritage Museum in Norway (technically Center of Northern Peoples, 2-hour drive from Tromso Airport) we were served this Elk Burger. Don't remember why the sauce is pink in color. No, the piece Day Night Day didn't remind me of the food.
The Grieg piano is a crowd-pleaser, even more so with Lang Lang as the soloist. I haven't seen him perform for quite a few years; he still stares a lot into empty space during breaks in the piano lines. For encore he played Consolations, S. 172: No. 2 in E Major by Liszt.
After the break was the New World Symphony by Dvorak. It is always nice to listen to, with all those folk melodies that Dvorak invented.
This photo is time-stamped at 8:50 pm. Nelsons was already on stage when the orchestra was tuning their instruments.
At the conclusion of the concert.
The big news in the music world in the last few weeks was that the BSO decided next season would be Nelsons' last with the organization, and that there have been non-stop protests by the musicians. Indeed people were handing out roses to wear as a sign of support. Most in the orchestra had one on, and Nelsons also had one pinned to his lapel.
While the concert was enjoyable, there was a sense of sadness at the imminent loss of a conductor evidently loved by the orchestra and the community, and a sense of disdain at the lack of transparency of the Board's decision. I imagine many orchestras would love to have Nelsons, and the new BSO music director (when named) will be under a lot of scrutiny.