Pianist Gabriel Paguirigan and conductor Olivier Ochanine with the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra |
Featuring:
Gabriel
Allan Paguirigan, piano
Philippine
Philharmonic Orchestra
Olivier
Ochanine, conductor
Programme:
Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart Overture from
Così Fan Tutte
Franz
Liszt Piano Concerto No. 2 in A
major, S.125
Gustav
Mahler Symphony No. 5
For
the past three years, the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of
principal conductor and music director Olivier Ochanine has been ending its
season with a piece of epic proportions that was taxing and challenging for
both the orchestra and the audience (Shostakovich 5, Mahler 1 and Rite of Spring). And to close out this season, the PPO’s 30th Concert Season
(entitled Milestones) that also marked
the PPO’s 40th Anniversary as well, it all ended with Mahler’s Fifth, a piece that is well
loved for its popular fourth movement Adagietto.
This concert held at the Cultural Center of the Philippines’
Tanghalang Nicanor Abelardo (CCP Main Theater) also featured the performance of
pianist Gabriel Allan Paguirigan who is the winner of the PPO’s Young Pianist
Competition.
The evening
started with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Overture from Così Fan Tutte. Ochanine
presented this classic overture in a light and fresh manner that effectively countered the summer heat that the entire country was experiencing. Then it was Gabriel’s turn to take center stage with Franz
Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in A major, S.125. I was definitely pleased when I
learned that this was going to be his concerto. Compared to Liszt’s first piano
concerto, the second is more subtle and more poetic. And I was more interested
to hear this rarely played piece since I got sick and tired of so many Liszt 1
performances during the composer’s bicentennial anniversary back in 2011.
Gabriel showed great improvement compared to his previous performance at the
Classical Champs concert. His Liszt 2 showed great balance of dazzling virtuosity along with nuanced and sensitive musicality. But I had to say that the almost inaudible piano that
he used had me struggling to hear his soft and delicate passages. It pleased me also that he chose the third movement Animé from Maurice Ravel’s Sonatine
for his encore. He handled this complex and technically difficult piece nicely
with finesse that it looked like a walk at the park for him.
On
the other hand, the final piece of the night was hardly a walk at the park at
all. Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 5 is a major work of over an hour that is an
exhausting endeavor for the orchestra to play and the audience to listen to. I
may be right to think that a lot in the audience was really looking forward to
the Adagietto but they had to sit
through three long movements before getting there. And the first two movements
consisting of a funeral march and a turbulent storm, aren’t the most entertaining pieces of music to hear. I noticed that most of them started to falter in listening during the Scherzo which I felt was a bit of a shame since the brilliant solo horn might've gone unnoticed by them. But it’s definitely rewarding taking
everything in and getting lost in the music. The PPO under Ochanine was able to
evoke a myriad of emotions ranging from the sorrow, hopelessness and despair to
passion, love and triumph. The major work that they played during the orchestra’s
last concert, Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé
had me scratching my head but Mahler’s Fifth definitely moved me.
The
PPO finally closed out its 30th Concert Season and while this was
billed as a milestone year for the orchestra, it didn’t feel celebratory
enough. I’d like to believe that the 40th Anniversary activities will continue on towards the first part of the upcoming season. And that this will result in every
concert becoming a buzz event that would be talked about long before it occurs and long after it’s done.
Text by RAd
Photo by Orly Daquipil
Text by RAd
Photo by Orly Daquipil
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