Los Angeles Times

Tito Muñoz is right at home

- The latest to take the guest baton helps the Pasadena Symphony shine in Brahms. By Richard S. Ginell calendar@latimes.com

The beat goes on at the Pasadena Symphony as the venerable orchestra continues to search for a new music director, evidently in no particular hurry since the post became vacant in May 2010. The New York City-born Tito Muñoz, 29, is one of the contenders; apparently management and the players liked what they saw in 2011 and invited him back for a second look Saturday at Ambassador Auditorium.

Last time, Muñoz was impressive­ly expressive in Elgar’s “Enigma Variations”; this time he again did his best work of the afternoon in the large-scale postinterm­ission offering, Brahms’ Symphony No. 1. His beat was clear and strong, his conception thick in texture yet mobile, moving along with solid rhythm and a good sense of how the crucial climaxes should be shaped.

In the Sibelius Violin Concerto, guest violinist Caroline Goulding had the talent and technique to sur- mount whatever Sibelius threw in her path. What her performanc­e lacked was focus; the piece emerged in fragments, with little sense of the overarchin­g lines within each movement. Muñoz projected some of the dark color of the orchestral part but couldn’t get any intensity or momentum going — in particular, the thrumming rhythm that animates the third movement was weak.

The sole venture outside the basic repertoire was short yet appealing — Pasadena Symphony’s composer-in-residence Peter Boyer’s “Apollo” from his suite, “Three Olympians.” Like Stravinsky’s “Apollo,” Boyer’s is scored for a string orchestra – and also like Stravinsky, Boyer goes for a neoclassic­al sound that is bracing, lyrical and never overloaded with sweeteners.

Convention­al wisdom says that you shouldn’t leave an orchestra in the everchangi­ng hands of guest conductors for very long. Yet from what I could hear, aside from an early entrance here or a questionab­le bit of intonation there, the Pasadena Symphony Orchestra has kept its game together since the departure of Jorge Mester.

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