Birmingham Post

REVIEW CBSO CENTENARY CONCERT

BBC Radio 3 and online stream

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Between them the CBSO’s technical wizards and BBC Radio 3 brought about a remarkable example of triumph over adversity in their relaying of the orchestra’s celebrator­y centenary concert, necessaril­y disfigured behind the pandemic’s shielding mask.

This concert, filmed and recorded in a deserted Symphony Hall (just imagine how full the joyous auditorium would have been in “normal” circumstan­ces) on the exact date when Elgar conducted the City of Birmingham Orchestra resident in Birmingham Town Hall for the first time 100 years ago, was packed with joyous affirmatio­n.

The Radio 3 broadcast a couple of days ago allowed us to concentrat­e on the quality of the music-making from players who have had so little ensemble contact for so many months, and brought us too a wonderfull­y evocative early history of the CBSO from my colleague Richard Bratby, author of Forward!, a compelling chronicle of the orchestra’s achievemen­ts. The streamed relay focussed our attention on the body-language of the musicians, bursting with adrenaline despite the absence of any pumping from the audience.

We eavesdropp­ed on the players assembling in rehearsal mufti, and on contributi­ons from conductor Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla (her long blonde locks now cropped a la Marin Alsop and even a la the CBSO’s own principal flautist MarieChris­tine Zupancic, object of a lot of camera attention), cor anglais soloist Rachael Pankhurst, a discussion between CBSO cellists Eduardo Vassallo (how good to see him restored to health after a serious battle with Covid-19) and Jackie Tyler and

Sheku Kanneh-Mason, soloist in the Elgar Cello Concerto. There was also a most touching and perceptive introducti­on from the Earl of Wessex, genuinely hands-on patron of the orchestra and of other Birmingham musical institutio­ns.

And the performanc­es? Two of Sibelius’ Kalevala-inspired tone-poems, Lemminkain­en’s Return and the Swan of Tuonela brought dark shadings, timbres judiciousl­y balanced and co-ordinated, Pankhurst plaintivel­y eloquent in the Swan’s extended solos.

Kanneh-Mason played the Elgar (which had featured in that inaugural concert a century ago) with an astonishin­g maturity, already with a sense of a life already long led, and reminding us of the even younger Yehudi Menuhin’s equally mature response to the Elgar Violin Concerto. It was so revealing to see the facial expression­s of the cellist’s immersion into what is actually elusive, evanescent music (he will never diminish it into a mere repertoire warhorse).

Deliberate­ly chosen or not, Beethoven’s Leonore no.3 Overture, a 14-minute opera as Mirga described it, is the quintessen­tial expression of liberation after lockdown, and it was so exhilarati­ngly given here. The offstage trumpet fanfares melted into the visual images of the CBSO busily rejoicing as this concert moved towards it conclusion, triumphant against all the odds.

Christophe­r Morley

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