Houston Chronicle

Houston Symphony takes different approach to ‘The Rite of Spring.’

- By Eric Skelly Eric Skelly is a writer in Houston.

The Houston Symphony brought its 2017-18 subscripti­on season to a close this past weekend with a program that offered a study in contrasts.

As heard in Jones Hall, the program offered a star guest soloist in two works by Mozart in a purist, traditiona­l approach to performing classical music. But after the intermissi­on, the shattering innovation of Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring” inspired the Houston Symphony to try some innovating of its own by way of employing multimedia to reinterpre­t Stravinsky’s audacious score. While the two approaches to performanc­e were dramatical­ly disparate, each proved apt for the works they sought to illuminate.

The first half of the evening was all about American pianist Emanuel Ax and his unpretenti­ous, masterful way with Mozart. He was joined by Houston Symphony principals Jonathan Fischer, Mark Nuccio, Rian Craypo and William VerMeulen for Mozart’s Quintet in E-flat major for Piano, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon and Horn, marked by tight ensemble work and expressive solo passages from each of the principals in the second movement.

With Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27, it was Ax’s turn to shine. Houston Symphony Music Director Andrés Orozco-Estrada’s affinity for Mozart set the tone with fluid, transparen­t textures in the orchestra. When Ax made his first entrance well into the first movement, he matched the orchestra’s fluid tone and sensitivit­y, and brought a fleet, seemingly effortless, un-showy virtuosity to the third movement. A Chopin Nocturne encore ended a first half of traditiona­l music-making that simply relied on the scores to stand on their own.

The program’s second half was dramatical­ly different. Stylistica­lly, Stravinsky would, at a later point in his career, embrace neo-classicism and compose music that would look back to Mozart. But he hadn’t gotten there yet when he wrote “The Rite of Spring.” Full of jarring rhythms and dissonance­s, this visceral, primal music seems galaxies away from the gentle sonic world of Mozart. Orozco-Estrada’s reading of this score emphasized lyricism and rhythmic precision, but also allowed the large orchestral forces — especially the percussion and brass — to cut loose.

The audience’s visual focus, however, was not on the orchestra but on the large screen suspended above it. To the right of the orchestra was a small, makeshift stage where solo dancer Yuka Oishi performed live, and at first, there was concern that this performanc­e would become a threering circus. But it quickly became clear that the audience was not intended to watch Oishi live, but rather her image projected live amid abstract digital animation on the screen.

Created by Klaus Obermaier in collaborat­ion with Ars Electronic­a Futurelab, the video element reinterpre­ted Stravinsky’s musical depiction of pagan ritual as a commentary on dehumaniza­tion in the digital age. The exquisitel­y choreograp­hed Oishi was transporte­d into a digital realm in which she found herself caught up in a digital vortex one moment, then multiple iterations of her fell through digital space the next. In the end, a river of ones and zeroes flowed under and then over and around her, disintegra­ting her and reconstitu­ting her into something no longer human. All this was choreograp­hed to Stravinsky’s elemental, ominous score.

Some audience members were overheard to say they felt the film element was too distractin­g. However, the audience as a whole reacted to the Stravinsky portion with even more enthusiasm than they did the very warmly received Mozart section, which would have been overwhelme­d by this live film and animation amalgam. Mozart rightly got the traditiona­l approach, while the multimedia treatment was saved for “The Rite of Spring,” a work that’s big and bold enough to fight for its fair share of attention.

 ?? J. Henry Fair ?? Pianist Emanuel Ax put Mozart’s work in the spotlight during his performanc­e at Jones Hall.
J. Henry Fair Pianist Emanuel Ax put Mozart’s work in the spotlight during his performanc­e at Jones Hall.

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