Trevor Pinnock celebration, Wigmore Hall, review: 'A triumphant celebration of a brilliant career'

Trevor Pinnock's seventieth birthday bash at the Wigmore Hall celebrated the success of the musician who, against advice, gave up the organ for the harpsichord

Michael Church
Monday 19 December 2016 13:23 EST
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Pulling the strings: the harpsichordist and conductor’s career spans more than 30 years
Pulling the strings: the harpsichordist and conductor’s career spans more than 30 years (Peer Lindgreen)

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When the 18-year-old Trevor Pinnock told the Royal College of Music that he wanted to forsake the organ for the harpsichord, the response could have been crushing. Nobody could make a living from the harpsichord, they said, and he’d also lose his scholarship money. Uncrushed, he made the jump, his local education authority – those were the days – made good the money, and the rest is history.

His seventieth birthday bash at the Wigmore – which gave him the rare accolade of its medal – was a triumphant celebration of a brilliant career, co-delivered with just a few of the huge number of musicians with whom he has pushed period performance into the mainstream. Katy Bircher was the fluent soloist in Bach’s second Orchestral Suite – a flute concerto in all but name – while Rachel Podger’s violin and Jonathan Manson’s cello graced a Handel sonata, and Pinnock’s own virtuosity lit up the fifth Brandenburg.

Then it was the turn of the Royal Academy of Music’s Alumni Ensemble – which Pinnock guest-conducts – to give a performance, with soprano Lauryna Bendziunaite, of Erwin Stein’s chamber arrangement of Mahler’s fourth symphony. It didn’t take long for the initial shock of this unfamiliar reduction to wear off: replacing orchestral padding with chamber electricity, this was a revelatory account.

Meanwhile Archiv have produced a 12-CD box of the Haydn recordings Pinnock has made with the English Concert he founded and ran for thirty years: treasure of a different sort.

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