Los Angeles Times

Like a Bowl night of days gone by

Stravinsky’s lively ‘ Petrushka’ returns; Joshua Bell delivers a 1980s take on Lalo.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

After a week of Gustavo Dudamel’s imaginativ­e programmin­g that featured living, breathing composers — Daníel Bjarnason and John Adams — taking bows, the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic returned to what might be called heirloom Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night.

A hot day bequeathed the kind of clement, warm evening that the Bowl advertises but can’t always deliver. A popular violinist played a virtuoso chestnut, Lalo’s “Symphonie Espagnole,” more in fashion in the days when folks still dressed to go to the Bowl, lighted up cigarettes rather then cellphones and brought servants to unpack picnics. Bramwell Tovey conducted Stravinsky’s “Petrushka,” for which there is also heirloom- able Hollywood Bowl history.

In August 1944, four years after his Bowl debut, Stravinsky conducted a performanc­e of the ballet to accompany a full production that featured a young new dancer, Jerome Robbins, in the title role. Exactly two weeks later and the day after Leonard Bernstein’s 26th birthday, Bernstein made his L. A. Phil debut at the Bowl conducting Stravinsky’s “Firebird,” with what The Times at the time felt had the angularity Stravinsky intended but not the rich tonal beauty or exact pitch.

For his part, Tovey valued rich tonal beauty over angularity. A former conductor for London’s Royal Ballet, he is well experience­d

in handling a danceable “Petrushka,” although his tempos here would have been on the rushed side for that. He nicely captured the lavish atmosphere and the quirky rhythmic character of Stravinsky’s early score. He made its tricky rhythmic bits f low with admirable naturalism and allowed eccentric instrument­al solos — that characteri­ze the main puppet characters as well as oddball stage and audience antics at a Russian fair — f ly by with spectacula­r ease.

Tovey also introduced the performanc­e by amusingly summarizin­g the ballet’s plot. In a talk at the Bowl’s once- fashionabl­e Tea House shortly before the 1944 “Petrushka,” however, the famed French pedagogue and most loyal of Stravinsky devotees, Nadia Boulanger, stubbornly warned her audience against becoming so concerned with identifyin­g the story that it won’t hear music.

The formidable Boulanger ( who once slapped a noted musicologi­st at a party at Mills College in Oakland for not properly appreciati­ng a mature blue cheese she had smuggled into the country from France) would surely have was been horrified by the applause, just before the end of this pleasingly plot- driven performanc­e, for a percussion­ist dropping a tambourine on a table, which is the way Stravinsky indicates the death of Petrushka. Tovey had alerted the crowd to the effect beforehand, lest anyone think that the new L. A. Phil principal percussion­ist, Matthew Howard, had screwed up. With that kind of charming welcome, Howard, I suspect, is going to like it here.

With appearance­s with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and Pacific Symphony in coming weeks, Bell clearly likes it here a lot, and Lalo’s “Symphonie Espagnole” also found the 49- yearold violinist looking back. It is the f irst concerto he learned, at age 11, and he has been playing it all summer ( including with the San Francisco Symphony and with the Royal Philharmon­ic at the London Proms).

More than looking back, Bell returns the 19th century showpiece, with its ingratiati­ng Spanish- French character, to the 1980s. The style then was to clean up a score that had been romanticiz­ed by such greats as Jascha Heifetz and Yehudi Menuhin. That didn’t work, and “Symphonie Espagnole” soon went out of fashion.

The French are starting to bring it back with a much more extensive restoratio­n process, playing Lalo with clarifying early instrument­s. The old school is also returning to fashion, with fabulous sounding newly refurbishe­d Menuhin and Heifetz recordings.

In contrast, Bell’s middle ground feels a little dated, not that there isn’t yet an- other fad for restoring early ’ 80s knickknack­s. He tossed off the most difficult passages with admirable ease. He played expressive lyric melodies with creamy ease.

If his pyrotechni­cs can seem generic, so what? Fireworks are another Bowl tradition.

There haven’t been as many physical ones bursting above the Cahuenga Pass this summer as there used to be. But Tovey did begin the program with a dazzling performanc­e of Stravinsky’s five- minute “Fireworks.”

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