Los Angeles Times

A sonic journey to Poland

Lukasz Borowicz leads the L. A. Phil New Music Group through eclectic, restless mix.

- By Rick Schultz

Listeners may recall the unsettling string effects of Krzysztof Penderecki’s 1961 “Polymorphi­a,” featured in “The Exorcist” and “The Shining.”

Nothing quite so hauntingly avant- garde turned up Tuesday at Walt Disney Concert Hall during the Green Umbrella series program, with 38- year- old Lukasz Borowicz conducting the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic New Music Group. But the concert, an eclectic mix of modernist, postmodern and neo- romantic contempora­ry Polish music, did feel like a throwback to the 1970s.

The night began with a U. S. premiere, Krzysztof Meyer’s aptly titled “Musique Scintillan­te,” a sparkling, f inely crafted 12- minute score that proved more substantiv­e than its short time frame might suggest. The Krakow- born Meyer, 72, studied with Penderecki, but similariti­es between their compositio­nal styles were mostly limited to Penderecki’s more tonal later period.

“Musique Scintillan­te” proceeded by fits and starts, with short declaratio­ns from brasses and woodwinds driving the piece. Meyer’s expert writing for the 15 Philharmon­ic players, artful use of percussion and extended techniques, including pianist Vicki Ray plucking strings inside the piano, contrasted effectivel­y with the score’s moments of repose and mystery. After f luttering f igurations from the woodwinds, a f inal f lourish from Nathan Cole’s violin ended the piece on a giddy note.

Throughout, conductor Borowicz maintained a lively pace, precisely executed by the Philharmon­ic musicians. Similarly, his account of Pawel Mykietyn’s mischievou­s “3 for 13” emerged as a colorful musical puzzle. In three movements for 13 players, the work is a witty short history of Western music — a pas- tiche of deconstruc­ted Baroque and other musical styles. There’s even a passage for celesta reminiscen­t of Tchaikovsk­y’s “Nutcracker.”

Through some mysterious alchemy, Mykietyn’s orchestral effects and resourcefu­l deployment of sonorities added up to more than the sum of its parts. The composer, 44, took a modest bow.

The program’s somber centerpiec­e, Penderecki’s Sinfoniett­a No. 2 for clarinet and 19 strings, a transcript­ion of his 1993 Clarinet Quartet, featured Burt Hara.

The Philharmon­ic’s associate principal, Hara gave a warm account of the solo part, his opening mournful tone echoed by dusky-sounding violas. Though Borowicz carefully balanced soloist and ensemble, much of Penderecki’s 18- minute score submerged the clarinet into the musical texture. Disconsola­te harmonies reminiscen­t of Bartók’s “Concerto for Orchestra” offered fitful interest, but the work lost its way amid superficia­l brooding.

Composer- singer Agata Zubel’s nine- minute “Chapter 13” for soprano and instrument­al ensemble, which was given its world premiere in the concert’s second half, might have benefited from less extravagan­t treatment. In her setting of the 13th chapter of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s “The Little Prince,” Zubel, 37, sang the parts of the prince and crude businessma­n. She used her super high- tessitura soprano to sometimes striking effect, but more often her articulati­on was swallowed up in Disney’s lively acoustic, shortchang­ing the text’s whimsical charm.

The longest work, Pawel Szymanski’s 20- minute “Quasi Una Sinfoniett­a” ( 1990), in its West Coast premiere, offered many ideas in search of persuasive organizati­on.

For Szymanski, 61, that may have been the point of the eclectical­ly restless score. Though spiked with lovely harmonies, the overstuffe­d and diffuse piece became wearying midway through.

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 ?? Rick Loomis
Los Angeles Times ?? LUKASZ BOROWICZ conducts the L. A. Phil New Music Group at Walt Disney Concert Hall on Tuesday.
Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times LUKASZ BOROWICZ conducts the L. A. Phil New Music Group at Walt Disney Concert Hall on Tuesday.

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