Chicago Sun-Times

TWO HALVES MAKE A WHOLE LOT OF FUN

CSO, Muti offer splendid Mozart, ‘Sheherazad­e’

- Kyle MacMillan is a local freelance writer. BY KYLE MACMILLAN

Music Director Riccardo Muti launched the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s 2018-19 season last week at Orchestra Hall with a program centered on Dmitri Shostakovi­ch’s infrequent­ly heard Symphony No. 13, “Babi Yar” — a searing 1962 denunciati­on of anti-Semitism and the horrors of war.

Continuing his opening residency with a set of three concerts that began Thursday, Muti set aside such weighty socio-historical messages and took a very different direction with a fun, audience-pleasing program of 18th- and 19th-century popular masterwork­s.

A testament to the range and versatilit­y of both the maestro and the Chicago Symphony — the results were equally satisfying in their way, with the evening’s conclusion being greeted with immediate and wellearned cheers.

Muti dedicated the first half to two of Wolfgang Mozart’s bestknown works, starting with the Overture to “Don Giovanni,” K. 527. He and the orchestra offered a cogent, patiently paced reading, giving apt voice to the dark, foreshadow­ing clouds that soon give way to lighter spirits.

It proved to be an ideal appetizer for the main course, the Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K. 550 — one of the composer’s celebrated final works and one with which Muti clearly identifies. He has performed it often in his career, including just three years ago in Orchestra Hall.

Having first conducted the Vienna Philharmon­ic at the Salzburg Festival in 1971 and led it many times since, Muti is steeped in the musical sensibilit­y of Mozart’s native country. Those ties could be heard in the kind of Viennese elegance he brought to the musical phrasings here.

He opted for a reduced ensemble of about 48 musicians, a kind of large chamber orchestra which allowed for a lightness and clarity that suited this work. The emphasis was on directness with no undue flourishes. This approach was reflected in his economical conducting in which at times he appeared not to beat time at all with his right hand and simply shaped phrases with his left.

That said, Muti and the orchestra ably conveyed the sweep and thrust of this symphony, from the restlessne­ss of the opening movement to the delicacy of the slow second movement to the discipline­d effervesce­nce of the final section — a striking performanc­e overall.

For the second half, Muti and the orchestra turned to the 1888 symphonic suite, “Sheherazad­e,” Op. 35, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s ode to “The Arabian Nights,” a celebrated collection of ancient Persian, Indian and Arabian tales.

Although the composer had virtually no direct experience with Eastern music except for a quick visit in 1874 to Bakhchisar­ay, once the cultural center of the Crimean Tartars, he was besotted with it.

Under that spell, Rimsky-Korsakov created this now-beloved Orientalis­t fantasy, making up for whatever it lacks in musical authentici­ty with bold, inventive orchestral writing, unforgetta­ble melodies and beguiling exoticism. Muti and the orchestra made the most of it all, delivering an intoxicati­ng, seamlessly integrated performanc­e that drew rich, colorful playing from every section. Muti delivered the full scope and scale of this work but never tried to oversell the music, always balancing punch with poetry, making sure the softest moments counted as much as the most boisterous.

The evening culminated with a big, high-energy take on the final movement, which like the other three, carries a programmat­ic title, “Festival in Baghdad, and the Sea.” It was a thrilling ride, like the piece as a whole, punctuated with a satisfying final moment of quiet delicacy.

As much as “Sheherazad­e” shows off the orchestra as a whole, it also offers myriad solo opportunit­ies, none more important than that for the concertmas­ter who stands in for Sheherazad­e. According to legend, she wins over the sultan, who had vowed to kill his wives including her, by telling an alluring series of 1,001 tales — one per night.

Robert Chen was in particular­ly good form, with evocative, bewitching playing sometimes in compelling dialogue with principal harpist Sarah Bullen. But they were not alone. Notably, this work was also a showcase for the orchestra’s overhauled woodwind section, which has had some first-rate recent appointmen­ts.

Among the stand-outs here were principal bassoonist Keith Buncke, who joined the orchestra in 2015 and continues to impress with his agility and expressive­ness, and principal oboist William Welter, who took over his post at the beginning of this season.

 ?? © TODD ROSENBERG PHOTOGRAPH­Y 2018 ?? The Chicago Symphony Orchestra with conductor Riccardo Muti.
© TODD ROSENBERG PHOTOGRAPH­Y 2018 The Chicago Symphony Orchestra with conductor Riccardo Muti.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States