I've recently been living off this quote from Dave in the
bass section of the CSO: "It's not that hard; it just takes a year to
learn it". He was talking of the
bass part of Beethoven Symphony no.9. I
just saw them playing it and the bass section did a fabulous job, clear and
present and crisply played. The next
morning I looked at the B9 bass part and I can see what he meant. Lots of notes over 25 close pages of bass
clef, but it's in Dmin so just one flat, and key changes to just 2 flats and 2
sharps at various times and pretty few accidentals, so the fast runs are scalar
and mostly consistent. There are some
big intervals and the lower notes that get played on their extensions so some
clumsy stuff, and the tempos are not very forgiving although pretty consistent,
but it is a work of supreme genius so worth the effort. The CSO did a great job at a decent tempo. The singers were satisfying. The choir was prepared by Tobias Cole and was
good but I just wanted it bigger. I
guess ~100 on stage with choir of ~40. The
vocal segment only comes in the final movement, although that's the
longest. The choir sat from the start,
but the feature singers entered after the second movement, I guess to allow
that transition to the final thrills.
They don't sing masses, but they were lovely to hear: always the
presence of the soprano, the fullness of mezzo, the bigness of bass and the
humanity of tenor. But mostly my ears
were for the basses. I did notice a
revealing passage where a lines moves from bass to cello to viola to seconds to
end with the firsts, not always identical but related. For me it was a revelation for the
violas. Otherwise, Jessica Cottis was
flowing and expressive in her conducting and informative with her introduction,
as were the EU Ambassador to Australia, Gabriele Visentin, and CSO CEO, Rachel
Thomas, who introduced the concert. The
Ode to joy is the EU's anthem, of course.
And not to forget composer Miriama Young who wrote the introductory
piece, a brooding and fairly short Daughters of Elysium, who appeared on stage
to applause after. But it's hard to share
with B9. It was given as 71min duration
but it felt nothing like that. I guess
it's a function of how well it's known, although I did notice the repeated
themes a few times, especially in the third movement. But the explosive styles and the uplifting
power and the thrilling fugues just take you over. Perhaps not apt for a classical concert but
my head was often nodding and my mouth a grin.
Just so fabulous. I just hope to
play this great work one day. Congrats
to our local orchestra and great to see so many local faces on stage and off. Bravo and thanks!
The Canberra Symphony Orchestra performed Beethoven
Symphony no.9 and Miriam Young in Llewellyn under Jessica Cottis (musical director,
conductor). Kristen Williams (violin)
was concertmaster. Solo singers were
Emma Pearson (soprano), Ashlyn Tymms (mezzo soprano), James Eagglesone (tenor)
and Adrian Tamburini (bass). Tobias Cole
(chorus master) prepared the CSO Chorus.
The bass section comprised Max McBride (principal), Kyle Ramsay-Daniel,
David Flynn and Muhamed Mahmedbasic.