Carol hits one out of the Park at Carnegie, CD to follow!

The bulk of the musical talk
Post Reply
User avatar
Tuba-G Bass
bugler
bugler
Posts: 202
Joined: Tue Jun 15, 2004 1:39 am
Location: Lehigh Valley, PA

Carol hits one out of the Park at Carnegie, CD to follow!

Post by Tuba-G Bass »

Hey Tubenetters!

Here is the Philly Inquirer's Review of the Philadephia Orchestra's performance
of the second Mahler Symphony at Carnegie Hall last tuesday,
big nod to Carol Jantsch at the bottom of the review!

snip
Orchestra takes Mahler to Carnegie Hall
By Peter Dobrin
Inquirer Music Critic
NEW YORK - Carnegie Hall is almost always efficacious for the Philadelphia Orchestra.
Whether it's the superb acoustic or some intangible aura relating to the venue's reputed magnificence,
Carnegie sends a dose of adrenaline through the ensemble.

The phenomenon has been in even greater evidence during the Christoph Eschenbach era.
Witnesses cite works that registered as passable in Philadelphia,
but grew to seemingly epochal importance by the time
the series rolled into New York three or four performances later.

Tuesday night's Mahler Symphony No. 2, "Resurrection," won't go down in orchestra history
as one of those charmed Carnegie concerts,
though it was spectacular in its own limited scope.
It was not marred with passages in which conductor and orchestra were in apparent chaos,
as players said was the case in Philadelphia Thursday and Saturday night.
And yet it was not one of those Mahler 2 performances that
send their message by way of frightening exactitude.

But emotional power comes in various forms, and Eschenbach found
sweetness in places others have overlooked.
The orchestra musicians had before them the standard parts
from the Ratz edition of the symphony,
but Eschenbach applied a number of note "corrections" from the
newly researched score by Gilbert Kaplan (who was in the audience),
according to orchestra artistic vice president Kathleen van Bergen.

Kaplan's score calls for a number of other changes that Eschenbach did not make.
Instead he layered on his own mannerisms,
some of which are peculiar, others of which are quite arresting.
A portion of the audience applauded for seven minutes.
A greater public will have its chance to react when the performances
and a late-night patch session are fashioned into
a "live" recording of the piece whose release is not yet scheduled.


Eschenbach's way with the first movement Tuesday night is perfectly emblematic of his approach.
There was some rough playing and some lovely playing. For Eschenbach,
the concept of tension and release does not play out over many bars.
He seizes a moment to speed or slow, and the momentum gets spent quickly.

The pattern tends to make music of suspense sound trite, as it did in the
second movement: One ridiculously goosed-up passage sped out of control.

Above all else, though, what this orchestra does well is snuggling up to a melody,
and in this regard, Eschenbach's tenderness in the first few minutes of the
luminous fourth movement contributed greatly to some phrases that sounded an awful lot like love.

The Philadelphia Singers Chorale, coached by music director David Hayes,
could hardly have sounded more ideal. Perfectly balanced with one another
and the orchestra, their sound was sturdy and present and beautiful.

What this performance did not have was soprano Barbara Bonney, who was signed to
sing but whose management announced in August her withdrawal from all concerts "for the foreseeable future."
It's a huge loss. Her replacement, Simona Šaturová, had a rather pale sound.
Mezzo Yvonne Naef had more presence and a rich sheen.

The 90-minute work is one of those "event" pieces with musicians everywhere (organ, off-stage players).
But often it was tuba player Carol Jantsch who seemed to be holding up the
foundation with a sound as clear and sure as it was luxurious.

unsnip

I can't wait for the Live CD!
Cheers,
Paul Lewis
Community/Church Musician
User avatar
Mojo workin'
4 valves
4 valves
Posts: 784
Joined: Thu Nov 16, 2006 1:44 pm
Location: made of teflon, behind the bull's eye

Post by Mojo workin' »

I can certainly believe that this was the case.

Does anybody know what model tuba(s) she plays on?
Tubaguy56
bugler
bugler
Posts: 183
Joined: Thu Mar 23, 2006 12:09 am

Post by Tubaguy56 »

PT-6 silver I believe...
Besson 983 Eb
Gronitz PCK
Miraphone 186 BBb (sold)
TubaRay
6 valves
6 valves
Posts: 4109
Joined: Mon Mar 22, 2004 4:24 pm
Location: San Antonio, Texas
Contact:

Carol hits one...

Post by TubaRay »

Scooby Tuba wrote:
Tubaguy56 wrote:PT-6 silver I believe...
PT6PS, to be exact...
I sure hope we don't get an M added in there somewhere.
Ray Grim
The TubaMeisters
San Antonio, Tx.
Post Reply