Bangkok Post

A SPECTACULA­R TOUR

The RBSO were exemplary ambassador­s of Thai music in the classical heart of Europe

- MICHAEL PROUDFOOT

The Royal Bangkok Symphony Orchestra made a triumphant return to Thailand last week after their whistle-stop tour of Europe, with three concerts in three cities in different countries, all in five days.

The concerts were in Vienna on May 18, Munich on May 20 and Paris on May 22, and were received enthusiast­ically by audiences at all three venues. A particular feature of the programmes was music specially composed for the orchestra by HRH Princess Sirivannav­ari Nariratana Rajakanya, who was present at the Paris performanc­e.

It was certainly a shrewd move by His Majesty King Maha Vajiralong­korn to appoint his daughter Princess Sirivannav­ari as patron of the Royal Bangkok Symphony Orchestra, consisting of many of the finest instrument­alists in Thailand. The Princess is devoted to changing possible misconcept­ions of Thai music and musicians.

Of course, the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej was an accomplish­ed musician himself, an expert saxophonis­t, and composer of innumerabl­e attractive musical pieces. HRH Princess Galyani Vadhana (the elder sister of King Bhumibol) was a great supporter of Thai musicians and Western classical music in Thailand, so Princess Sirivannav­ari continues the royal enthusiasm for music. She is herself an accomplish­ed pianist and the concerts revealed to the European music-loving public that she is a very talented composer as well, with two pieces written specially for the orchestra.

The pieces are Nefreretta, a concerto for violin and orchestra, and a Fantasie Pour Piano Et Orchestre, Le Mariage De Minuit. They are both what might be described as tone poems, portraying changing moods and emotions, with swift changes in dynamics and tempi. The pieces require outstandin­g soloists. The German Niklas Liepe played the violin brilliantl­y in Nefreretta, and Titos Gouvelis, from Greece, played the piano with Rachmanino­v-like virtuosity in Le Mariage De Minuit. The two compositio­ns draw upon the Princess’ visits to a Viennese museum, which displays exhibits from ancient Egypt, the history of communitie­s along the Danube River, and ancient Greek legends. They are composed in an easily accessible style which engages the audience throughout with attractive melody and thrilling drama.

The swift changes in mood provided plenty of opportunit­y to show off all sections of the orchestra to brilliant effect — even the triangle was prominent in places! And the instrument­s included one invented by the Princess herself, with a hand-cranked wheel spinning to produce a subtle whispering effect of a cool breeze.

In fact, the whole programme was cleverly chosen, with two of the most popular pieces of classical music starting and finishing the programme. Not only that, but the pieces had a close connection to two of the venues for the concerts. The first was Vltava by the Czech composer BedĜich Smetana who was born in Litomysl, very close to the border with present-day Germany. It is a part of his symphonic cycle Ma Vlast – My Fatherland, celebratin­g the composer’s native Bohemia.

Vltava starts in Bavaria, the German state whose capital is Munich, and is not so very far from Vienna: a canny choice for concerts in those two cities. The music evokes the course of the Danube through the Czech Republic, building from a small stream to a mighty river. The conductor Michel Tilkin drew a magnificen­t performanc­e from the orchestra. Particular­ly remarkable were the swift changes in dynamics, with, for example, instant transition­s from fortissimo to pianissimo. The woodwind provided a confident start to the piece, and the brass section were especially strong later on.

And the final item on the programme was by the greatest of Czech composers, Antonín DvoĜák. His Symphony No.8 in the sunny key of G major, and by far his most cheerful, celebrates the music and people of his native country. The brass and percussion sections were particular­ly effective, and the cellos and double basses provided a strong foundation for the orchestra’s whole sound. DvoĜák uses folk melodies, but also grand, often very Brahmsian, themes played by the whole orchestra. This was especially evident in the final movement, which is reminiscen­t of the great theme of Brahms’s First Symphony which itself has often been likened to the theme of Ode To Joy from the last movement of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony.

At the Munich concert, there were two encores. In the first, the two soloists Liepe and Gouvelis played the well-named Perpetuum Mobile, the third movement of the sonata for violin and piano by the contempora­ry Turkish composer Fazil Say. And in the second, the whole orchestra lovingly played the richly romantic piece Alexandra, by the Princess’ grandfathe­r King Bhumibol.

Maestro Tilkin and the wonderful members of the orchestra were outstandin­g ambassador­s for Thai music in three of the centres of European classical music. Princess Sirivannav­ari must be congratula­ted both on her own musical talent and on her internatio­nal promotion of Thai music and musicians.

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Pianist Titos Gouvelis at the Paris concert.
RIGHT
The Paris performanc­e at La Seine Musicale.
LEFT Pianist Titos Gouvelis at the Paris concert. RIGHT The Paris performanc­e at La Seine Musicale.
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HRH Princess Sirivannav­ari Nariratana Rajakanya at the Paris concert.
LEFT HRH Princess Sirivannav­ari Nariratana Rajakanya at the Paris concert.
 ?? ?? The concert at Musikverei­n in Vienna.
The concert at Musikverei­n in Vienna.

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