Los Angeles Times

Shaham, in a playful mood, picks up speed

The violinist brings a refreshed spirit to Bartók. Stéphane Denève happily joins.

- By Richard Ginell calendar@latimes.com

Violinist Gil Shaham’s career has been taking some very intriguing left turns lately.

He came up with a terrific programmin­g idea recently, recording as many of the worthy violin concertos written in the 1930s as he can lay his Stradivari­us on — the standards and the obscuritie­s — for his own label, Canary Classics.

There is also a curious new item where, in recognitio­n of “research” on classical music’s alleged repellent effect on teenagers, Shaham slapped together some excerpts from his recordings and packaged them in a CD with the title “Music to Drive Away Loiterers.” Of course, it was released on April Fools’ Day.

All of this brainstorm­ing seems to have invigorate­d Shaham. Certainly his performanc­e of one of those 1930s violin concertos, the No. 2 by Bartók, with Sté- phane Denève and the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic at Walt Disney Concert Hall Thursday night, reflected the sheer pleasure he is getting out of re-exploring this music.

Shaham had recorded the Bartók about 15 years ago with the redoubtabl­e pairing of Pierre Boulez and the Chicago Symphony, but the Disney Hall performanc­e was that of a changed man. At 361⁄2 minutes, Shaham took it a full four minutes faster than he did with Boulez — not quite at Bartók’s incredibly fast proposed time of 32 minutes (which no one observes anymore), but headed there.

More important, there was a sense of playfulnes­s now in Shaham’s Bartók that wasn’t there before, shedding just the right bit of polished sheen in his tone at appropriat­e moments, reveling in the sound of surprise with bursts of power and the quietest of pianissimo­s.

With Denève poking around the score revealing all kinds of strange details that the Philharmon­ic executed with relish, this team brought out the weirdness of this music that often gets buried nowadays underneath super-slick virtuosity. When Shaham gets around to rerecordin­g the Bartók for his 1930s project, Denève would be a good match for him.

The majority of the evening’s playing time was re- served for Rachmanino­ff ’s expansive, irresistib­ly melodious Symphony No. 2, whose hyper-Romantic symphonic rhetoric launched a thousand film scores.

Denève chose to make it move, rumbling through the Scherzo with plenty of dash, giving the big tunes of the Adagio and that knockout lyrical passage in the Fi- nale lots of room to breathe yet without exaggerati­ng the built-in emotional payoff.

After all of the minimalist/maximalist modernisms of the previous weekend in Disney Hall, it was startling to realize that we were still dealing with music from the 20th century.

 ?? Lawrence K. Ho
Los Angeles Times ?? VIOLINIST Gil Shaham is soloist in Bartók’s Second Violin Concerto at Walt Disney Concert Hall. Stéphane Denève conducts the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic.
Lawrence K. Ho Los Angeles Times VIOLINIST Gil Shaham is soloist in Bartók’s Second Violin Concerto at Walt Disney Concert Hall. Stéphane Denève conducts the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic.

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