Entertainment |
|
|
What to do in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas |
|
|
Home
The Arts
Books
Performing Arts
Visual Arts
Attractions
Kids & Family
Sports & Recreation
Best in DFW
Celebrity News
Movies
Music & Nightclubs
Reviews
Restaurants
Television
TV Listings
Video Games
Visitors' Guide
Columnists
Video
GuideLive.com/extra
About GuideLive
Blog: Arts
Blog: Local Scene
Blog: Movies
Blog: Music
Blog: Eats
Blog: TV
Blog: Punchbutton
Blog: Shopping Buzz
Blog: Texas Pages
Newsletters
Submit an Event
Search Archives
|
FWSO sounds are good, but performance too businesslike12:00 AM CDT on Saturday, May 10, 2008FORT WORTH–Miguel Harth-Bedoya has the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra sounding quite good these days: well-tuned, rhythmically taut and tonally polished. As a conductor he has a sure command of loud and soft, fast and slow, and how to get from one to the other. But the FWSO's music director too rarely conveys emotional intensity, whether romantic, angry or ironic. This was a problem Friday night in the Shostakovich Fifth Symphony. Solomon Volkov's Testimony, purporting to record the Russian composer's own thoughts, describes the symphony's finale as forced rejoicing, as if beaten by a stick. However one judges Mr. Volkov's controversial book, surely the symphony is shot through with irony and anxiety. The loud parts can take care of themselves, and Mr. Harth-Bedoya and the FWSO whipped up jolly noises. But he found no irony in the finale, and the slow movement and the first movement's slow introduction had hardly a whiff of tension or tragedy. The orchestra played well, but this emotionally charged symphony sounded strangely inconsequential. It didn't help that Bass Performance Hall seemed acoustically drier than usual. The Mendelssohn E minor Violin Concerto had the splendid services of violinist Leila Josefowicz. She seemed to pick up Mr. Harth-Bedoya's businesslike manner in the slow movement, which even at a mobile tempo wanted more expressive give and take. But she delivered the virtuoso writing with shape as well as skill. The orchestra's contributions were marred only by a couple of overly harsh fortissimos. PLAN YOUR LIFE Repeats at 8 tonight and 2 p.m. Sunday at Bass Performance Hall, Fourth and Commerce, Fort Worth. $15 to $76. 817-665-6000, www.fwsymphony.org. This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow. This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow.
More headlines
The Best in DFW: Best frozen treats Sneak peek: The X-Files: I Want to Believe Junior Players give 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' a Bollywood twist Dallas restaurant owner Lisa Garza faces heavy competition to be 'The Next Food Network Star' They love 'Nashville Star' finalist Melissa Lawson in Arlington |
Advertising |
|
Frequently Asked Questions | Contact Us | Privacy | Terms of Service | Site Map | About Us | Quick Links
© 2008 The Dallas Morning News, Inc. |