Classical review: LA Phil New Music Group/Dudamel/Adams, Barbican, London
A theatrical showman of a composer presided over a weak ending which couldn't transcend its own experimentalism
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Until the flamboyant emergence of Evelyn Glennie, percussionists were pretty much confined to the servants’ quarters at the back of the stage. Pereira has taken full advantage of the new freedom, revelling in the theatricality of his own performance to the point where one has to make a conscious effort to listen to the music. This turned here on the contrast between pitched (as in marimbas) and unpitched (as in drums) instruments, and on the slithery spectrum in between: I’ve never heard a marimba played with such microtonal delicacy. If it all added up to not very much, we did get to explore the wilder shores of technique.
The Korean composer Unsuk Chin was the originator of the other new piece, whose title Graffiti turned out to have no bearing on it at all. Chin’s long-winded programme note – which perpetrated the cardinal error of providing its own review – boiled down to the stunningly banal assertion that that it was all about ‘roughness and refinement, complexity and transparency’, as if that wasn’t what virtually every contemporary piece is now about. With a hyperactive fast movement, a drifting slow one, and a spiky finale, she displayed her pedigree as a former student of Gyorgy Ligeti, but her music, unlike his, didn’t transcend its own experimentalism. Dudamel conducted these tiresome pieces very efficiently, but the superb music-making of the LA Phil New Music Group had been put to more congenial use at the start of the concert, when John Adams conducted his own exuberant Son of Chamber Symphony.
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