Then Maruki performing more repertoire. I love Maruki for its brave approach to repertoire, the full programs, the unflinching takes on the hardest works. Again a threesome of overture, concerto and symphony: Mendelssohn Midsummer Night's Dream overture, Beethoven Piano concerto no 2 Bbmaj and Tchaikovsky Symphony no.1 Gmin. Never flinch, even with the demands of this Tchaikovsky symphony. This was a doozy, all chromatics and glorious melody, not least on bass and quick lines and odd timings and frantic stringendos and ever trustworthy brass who saved the day for me a few times. This was not easy and I'd not managed too many rehearsals. Next to the Tchaiks, the Mendelssohn seemed trivial if exciting and the Beethoven, played by Cornelia Dragusin, was beautiful with a Mozartian delicacy and danceability. But as ever, to reach the end of such a program and such a demanding composition as the Tchaiks is a pleasure and satisfaction. We are a welcoming unauditioned community orchestra and this is as hard as it comes but just having learnt this and the rest of the repertoire that we work through is a great satisfaction and an opportunity to get into the guts of a work and know it in a way that listening just doesn't provide. And the size of the orchestra just confirms I'm not alone in this pleasure. PS. The pics are from the warmup, not the concert, of course.
Maruki Orchestra preformed Mendelssohn, Beethoven and Tchaikovsky at Albert Hall under Kristen Simpson. The Beethoven concerto featured soloist Cornelia Dragusin (piano). Bottom enders were Owen Livermore and Eric Pozza (bass).