NEW YORK, NY.- When Riccardo Muti stepped down from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra last season, after 13 years as its conductor, the ensemble promptly turned around and named him music director emeritus for life.
In a two-part season opener at Carnegie Hall this week, it was easy to hear why.
Under Muti, the Chicago Symphony is all power and finesse with no unsightly edges. On Wednesday, in Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovskys Violin Concerto and Modest Mussorgskys Pictures at an Exhibition, the orchestras playing, strong yet nimble, drew on reserves of unforced power and charm. The following night, in an Italian-themed collection of programmatic works by Felix Mendelssohn, Johann Strauss and Philip Glass, a certain politesse crept into an otherwise classy performance.
Theres no better illustration of the orchestras might than the final movement of the Mussorgsky, The Great Gate of Kyiv. Maurice Ravels orchestration of Mussorgskys delightful piano suite reaches its apotheosis here, and on Wednesday, Muti built a magnificent edifice out of it, with crashing cymbals, all-out brasses and majestic strings. Using an extreme economy of gesture, he barely had to move for the players to unleash torrents of stupendous, beautifully balanced sound.
At the risk of cliché, the ensembles remarkable cohesion feels like a kind of Midwestern humility, focusing attention on the music instead of individual players. Tasteful instrumental solos, such as that of concertmaster Robert Chen in Strauss Aus Italien, didnt disturb the musical fabric. Technical mastery emerged in what wasnt there: The heavenly woodwinds were airborne without being breathy, and guest principal harp, Julia Coronelli, conveyed beauty without pluck in the Strauss and in Glass The Triumph of the Octagon. Mutis dynamic mapping avoided jolts or spikes; ardor and neatness coexisted.
His Pictures at an Exhibition balanced theatricality and unity in the vividly drawn scenarios of Ravels orchestration. The first Promenade, in which Mussorgsky depicts himself wandering through the art show of his dearly departed friend, painter Viktor Hartmann, had a gracious, wide-footed gait. Timothy McAllisters satiny alto saxophone wafted like a mist through the wide stone halls of The Old Castle. Tuileries traded the unseemly lilt of whining children for a singsong quality. The Hut on Hens Legs lurched with delicious, brutal violence. Muti interpreted the scores attacca markings (indicating that the movements should be played without pause) as seamless transitions instead of opportunities for surprise.
The orchestras plush power in the Tchaikovsky evoked the proverbial iron fist in a velvet glove, so its a shame that the evenings soloist, Leonidas Kavakos, derailed the performance with curdled tone, sloppy passagework, cracked high notes and tuning issues. There were pretty turns of phrase in the second movement, and Kavakos could hide his unpolished sound in the guttural character of the third. For a performer of a normally high caliber, though, it was a shabby showing.
Glass The Triumph of the Octagon, dedicated to Muti, opened the second night. Its a 10-minute piece inspired by a photo of a 13th-century Italian castle that Glass saw hanging in the maestro's studio at Orchestra Hall in Chicago, a memory from Mutis childhood. The music gradually accumulated a mysterious timelessness with the shifting emphases of its time signatures and the delicate deployment of woodwind timbres.
Muti avoided any inkling of stridency in the dashing opening of Mendelssohns Italian Symphony, which rushed forward with grace and buoyancy. Melodies intertwined delicately in the Andante. The perpetual motion of the third movement felt unobstructed but also unhurried; the strings played all the way through phrases and left them hanging in the air, and the brasses were unafraid to assume a blanched color to maintain the movements particular tint.
The elegant passion on display in the Mendelssohn hampered the players in the Strauss, his first tone poem, a piece that wraps together images of Italy with the swooning ecstasies they arouse. Still, some passages are recognizably pictorial, such as the third movements suggestion of the shores of Sorrento, with the dappling of the sun on the surface of the sea rendered in shimmery chromaticism. There, the orchestra was quite enchanting, but in the second movement, it lacked punch. Too often, Strauss impetuous reveries were flattened into a predictable sameness.
A truer sense of romance and spontaneity could be found in the encores on both evenings. They were drawn from Italian opera, a specialty of Muti, who was the longtime music director of Teatro alla Scala in Milan. Following the adrenaline rush of The Great Gate of Kyiv, Muti struck up the intermezzo from Umberto Giordanos Fedora with seductive vulnerability.
On the second night, the overture to Giuseppe Verdis Giovanna dArco had everything the Strauss didnt: crackling energy and a sense of reveling not just in the music, but also in the ensemble itself. It provided a handsome, though still subtle, showcase for the winds to take a victory lap and for Muti to do so too.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.