A Ukrainian orchestra speaks with quiet intensity
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, November 17, 2024


A Ukrainian orchestra speaks with quiet intensity
An attendee waves the Ukrainian flag as the Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra performed outside the Lincoln Center in Manhattan, Aug. 18, 2022. The orchestra, convened just a month ago, showed its defiance with a performance of sophistication, craft, rigor and subtlety. Caitlin Ochs/The New York Times

by Zachary Woolfe



NEW YORK, NY.- Johannes Brahms’ Fourth Symphony doesn’t mean anything. Like much of the classical music repertory, it has no text, no plot. It elicits emotions but not in a rigidly defined way. At a concert, your neighbor’s experience of it, her explanation of its effect, will almost certainly be different from yours.

It’s also, like much of the repertory, chameleonic — a different piece if you’ve suffered a heartbreak or celebrated a joy. On Thursday, when the Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra performed the symphony at Lincoln Center, the notes were the same as ever. But, played by dozens of Ukrainian musicians on a mild evening in Damrosch Park, the score took on an air of calm but implacable defiance, what French poet Arthur Rimbaud once called “burning patience.” There was no hysteria to this Brahms, just resolute intensity.

Although the performance, with its unified, focused passion, seemed like the work of a well-practiced ensemble, this orchestra convened for the first time only a month ago, as an effort to showcase Ukraine’s culture and what the country’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has called “artistic resistance” to the Russian invasion.

It is the brainchild of conductor Keri-Lynn Wilson, who has Ukrainian roots, and her husband, Peter Gelb, general manager of the Metropolitan Opera. Wilson and Gelb rallied sponsors and the assistance of the Polish National Opera in Warsaw, Poland, which hosted rehearsals and the first show of a 12-city tour, which continues through Saturday in Washington.

Playing under Wilson’s baton, the musicians represent a range of Ukrainian ensembles, and some are members of orchestras elsewhere in Europe. The Ukrainian government made the crucial contribution of allowing male players to participate in the tour, even though men of military age are now barred from leaving the country.

But make no mistake: The men and women of the Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra are fighting. As critic Jason Farago wrote last month in The New York Times, the risks to Ukrainian culture “are more than mere collateral damage” in this battle. This is, he added, a true culture war; Russia is seeking not just land but also the erasure of a country’s artistic output and history. Anyone who is resisting that is a soldier.

“I don’t have a gun,” one of the orchestra’s musicians told the Times recently, “but I have my cello.”

So it was natural that the evening had its moments of national pride. Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Nations, Sergiy Kyslytsya, took the stage to declare “Glory to Ukraine,” and Wilson echoed that sentiment — in Ukrainian — from the podium. A huge Ukrainian flag stretched behind the musicians; at the end, the soloists took a bow wrapped in flags, and still more were waved in the audience.

But this wasn’t a performance given over to jingoism; it favored refinement. You got the impression that the best way to fight imperialism and authoritarianism — from the concert stage, at least — was with sophistication, craft, rigor, subtlety. For all its moments of high drama, the program was admirably even-keeled and soft-spoken, an embodiment of a cultured nation. Even the arrangement of the Ukrainian anthem at the end was impressionistic and elegant, the opposite of stentorian.




There has never been a perfect outdoor orchestral performance; instruments made for warm indoor acoustics take on an edge, and overamplified strings swamp the woodwinds every time. This was not the best possible setting for the U.S. premiere of preeminent Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov’s Symphony No. 7 (2003), a poignant and canny single-movement work that begins in agony; dips (a la Dmitri Shostakovich) knowingly into kitschy sweetness; and then slowly dissolves, ending with the eerie, toneless sound of breathing through brasses.

Pianist Anna Fedorova was a sensitive, poetic soloist in Frédéric Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2, a nod to the Polish support for the Freedom Orchestra project. Soprano Liudmyla Monastyrska — who replaced Anna Netrebko at the Met after Netrebko’s contracts were canceled in the wake of the Russian invasion — sang Leonore’s aria of rebellion from Beethoven’s “Fidelio.”

But most impressive was the Brahms symphony, not a piece easily thrown together by a pickup orchestra. (On Friday at Damrosch, as the closing night of Lincoln Center’s Summer for the City festival, the Brahms will be replaced by Antonín Dvorak’s “New World” Symphony, and the “Fidelio” aria by Aida’s paean to her homeland, “O patria mia.”)

Despite the outdoor acoustics, the sound was remarkably rich in the first movement; the second was eloquent; the third buoyant but still substantial, carried off with understated panache.

The finale was less ferocious than you might have thought it would be, given the occasion, and was all the more moving for that restraint. Some have heard in the end of Brahms’ Fourth grimness and destruction, a kind of gorgeous annihilation. This was the opposite: a declaration of continued presence.

It’s not quite true that the work is pure music, without any external connections; you just have to dig a bit. Brahms derived the theme of the finale from the final movement of a Bach cantata, the opening words of which could have been this concert’s — and this orchestra’s — credo: “My days of suffering, God will finally end in joy.”



Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra

Through Friday at Damrosch Park at Lincoln Center, lincolncenter.org.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

August 20, 2022

That painted Greek maiden at the Met: Just whose vision is she?

Drumroll, please..."Making Music in Early America" opens at the Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg

U.S. ship sunk by Germans in 1917 is found off English coast

Richard Saltoun opens a major exhibition dedicated to trailblazing feminist artists Rosa Lee and Jo Bruton

GRIMM announces the representation of London-based painter Francesca Mollett

Pérez Art Museum Miami opens 'Christo Drawings: A Gift from the Maria Bechily and Scott Hodes Collection'

List Center unveils major new public art commission by Agnieszka Kurant

CHART announces the public programme for its celebratory 10th edition

MAKI Gallery opens a solo exhibition by Kamakura-based artist Anne Kagioka Rigoulet

Academy Art Museum shows significant works in 'Fickle Mirror: Dialogues in Self-Portraiture'

2022 edition of Zürcher Theater Spektakel: New works by Ragnar Kjartansson, Lina Lapelyt ė and Meg Stuart

Rare, historic powder horns, swords and pistols featured at Bonhams Skinner

LA-based nomadic art collective takes the show on the road with its first national exhibition in Denver

Cantor Art Gallery commissions large-scale painting by Justine Hill to mark the opening of its new home

Trisha Brown on the beach: Catch a wave of dancing bliss

There's a new billboard in town, and you can walk in

A conductor comes into his own in the opera pit

Abdul Wadud, cellist who crossed musical boundaries, dies at 75

A Ukrainian orchestra speaks with quiet intensity

J. Garrett Auctioneers announces Part 2 of items from T. Boone Pickens collection

Columbia names a new Dean for its Architecture School

Art Gallery of NSW unveils new 20th-century galleries

Steve Jobs' Apple-1 Computer prototype sold for $677,196 at auction

Apollo Art Auctions presents connoisseur's selection of expertly vetted ancient and Islamic art, August 28

How art work benefits therapy among people?

Luvmehair Throw on and Go Wigs: Hassle-Free Hair Solution

Top 7 Most Famous Sports Betting Losses in History

Most beautiful piece of the jewel; Moissanite Rings

HOW TO TRAVEL WITH A FULL-TIME JOB

How to Create a YouTube Channel Step-by-Step




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful