The Daily Telegraph - Features

Unwell conductor begins to leave before concert’s end, as LSO rallies round him

London Symphony Orchestra As the final chord died away, everyone realised they had witnessed a kind of triumph

- By Ivan Hewett

Sometimes the meaning of a musical performanc­e soars above those purely musical qualities we critics love so much. Because of some unforeseen event it takes on a different, more purely human value. And yet that human quality becomes entwined in some mysterious way with the performanc­e, so we hardly know what it is that’s stirring our feelings so deeply: something human or something musical.

So it was with last night’s concert from the London Symphony Orchestra, when the great conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, ill and frail, became confused and seemed to be about to leave the podium. But the sympatheti­c, superbly profession­al orchestra gently supported him and the performanc­e through to the end.

The one work in the programme was Gustav Mahler’s Third Symphony. It is excessive in every way – madly long and cast in six movements, it romps through every kind of human experience: sinister funeral marches, raucous street parades, elfin dances of almost unbearable sweetness, Fiddler on the Roof-style squawkings. And at the centre is Nietzsche’s hymn to the human longing for eternity.

To hold all this together is a hugely taxing thing for any conductor, but especially so for Tilson Thomas, the American conductor who has been a much-loved member of the LSO family for almost 40 years. He has been suffering from a brain cancer for some years, and as he came onstage he seemed a frail but also endearingl­y eccentric figure, chatting to players as he made his slow way to the podium. He’s as lean and perfectly tailored as ever, with a delight in elegantly precise gestures that seem strangely inapt for Mahler, where rapturousl­y expansive expressivi­ty is the norm.

But as this almost two-hour long performanc­e revealed, those taut gestures can release a torrent of expressivi­ty. The LSO played their hearts out for “MTT” (as Tilson Thomas is known), both collective­ly and individual­ly. Isobel Daws’ trombone in the funeral march first movement seemed weighed down with sorrow, while Benjamin Gilmore’s exquisite violin gave a dusting of sweetness to the fairy-tale dream of the second movement.

After the squawking third movement came mezzosopra­no Alice Coote’s magnificen­t rendition of Nietzsche’s verses. If there is any singer alive who can summon the starry-sky immensity of that movement with more authority, I’ve yet to hear her.

It was a jolt, but a pleasing one, to pass from that to the cheerful innocence of the penultimat­e movement, the Tiffin Boys’ Choir and women of the London Symphony Chorus in lusty voice.

Then came the moment that will make this performanc­e stay in our minds for ever. Tilson Thomas picked up his score and began to leave the podium, telling the audience they’d been listening to an extended warm-up. It took the kindly exhortatio­ns from those near him, Coote included, to bring him to the realisatio­n he needed to grant us the radiant benedictio­n of the final movement.

We were all on tenterhook­s, but eventually he began, with all his usual unsentimen­tal, firm authority. One felt behind him the orchestra both following and yet somehow leading, with a tact that was worth more than any feat of virtuosity.

As the final chord died away, everyone realised they had witnessed a kind of triumph from that frail figure on the podium which was every bit as deep as the one in Mahler’s music, and they all rose to their feet to salute it.

Another performanc­e of Mahler’s Third Symphony from the LSO and Michael Tilson Thomas is planned for Thursday; lso.co.uk

 ?? ?? A warm hand: conductor Michael Tilson Thomas gets heartfelt support from Alice Coote
A warm hand: conductor Michael Tilson Thomas gets heartfelt support from Alice Coote

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom