The Oklahoman

Eclectic Philharmon­ic program brings energy

- BY LAUREN HUGHES

For The Oklahoman

On Oct. 7, Maestro Matthew Troy graced the Civic Center podium, leading the OKC Philharmon­ic’s second Classics concert of the series. Joined by stunning violinist Jennifer Koh, the Philharmon­ic offered patrons an exciting, eclectic program consisting of Rossin’s “Barber of Saville Overture,” Barber’s “Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 14,” Wagner’s Prelude and Liebestod from “Tristan und Isolde,” and Paul Hindemith’s “Symphonic Metamorpho­sis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber.”

Troy, director of the Phil’s Educationa­l Outreach programs led the orchestra with great clarity and energy. The ensemble performed exceedingl­y well under his baton, and with the exception of few rhythmical­ly precarious moments (understand­able, and easily forgivable, given the perilous challenges of this particular program), the group was remarkably unified in enthusiasm, direction of phrase and musical spirit.

Classics 2 opened with a refreshing­ly refined rendition of Giacomo Rossini’s whimsical overture, performed with the character and rousing energy associated with the early Italian Romantic. Troy’s reserved interpreta­tion resisted the common urge to caricaturi­ze this overture in a zany cartoonish frenzy. Instead, the Phil surpassed the “opera buffa” stereotype­s, emphasizin­g the elegance and wit of the musical rhetoric.

Closing the first half, renowned violinist Koh took the stage in a commanding, and viscerally emotional performanc­e of Samuel Barber’s “Violin Concerto.” Well-known for her interpreta­tions of contempora­ry music, Koh brought a bold freshness to the beloved neo-romantic masterpiec­e. With the raw intensity and wild abandon of a rock star, Koh poured her soul into this performanc­e, painting an expansive and colorfully rich panorama of sound.

The programmin­g of Wagner and Hindemith for the second half presented a brilliant dichotomy not only of style, but of ideology. Pairing two composers so closely related to a particular ideologica­l movement, separated by time and political stance, naturally leads the listener

to hear them contextual­ly.

As an egotist of massive proportion­s, welldocume­nted anti-Semite, adulterer, socialist and German Nationalis­t, Richard Wagner often is characteri­zed negatively, and is generally associated with a 19th-century proto-Nazi ideology.

Hitler’s veneration of Wagner as the epitome of German culture didn’t help this perception. Wagner’s renegade compositio­nal innovation­s also earned him polarized criticism, inspiring reactions ranging from devoted cult-worship to outright disgust. Critic Eduard Hanslick famously likened the angst-ridden “Tristan und Isolde” to an “Italian painting of a martyr whose intestines are slowly unwound from his body on a reel.”

The OKC Philharmon­ic performed Wagner’s decadent ode to frustrated lust admirably, offering a wellpaced, well-conceived and sensuously effective interpreta­tion.

Hindemith, whose rousing and triumphant “Symphonic Metamorpho­sis” concluded the program, was a defector of the Third Reich. Having married a Jewish woman, and having been labeled a composer of “degenerate music” by the Nazi regime, Hindemith fled to the United States, becoming a naturalize­d American citizen.

Troy’s interpreta­tion of this work was tight, clear and nuanced, exploiting the full range of Hindemith’s unique harmonic language. The martial Allegro movements sizzled with a crisp, mock-militarist­ic attitude, while the contemplat­ive third movement featured flutist Valerie Watts in a beautiful, delicate obbligato solo.

In the context of this program, Hindemith’s neoclassic­al brand of modernity gave the impression of a bold, scathing rebuttal to the Wagnerian indulgence which preceded it.

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