Kanneh-Mason bares the soul of the cello with Pittsburgh Symphony players

Sheku Kanneh-Mason, cello
David McCarroll, violin
Anne Martindale Williams, cello
Dale Jeong, cello
Bronwyn Banerdt, cello
Alexandra Lee, cello
Additional Strings and Harp of the Pittsburgh Symphony

Heinz Hall
Pittsburgh, PA
March 22, 2025

Bach: Komm, süßer Tod, komm selge Ruh, BWV 478 (arr. Kanneh-Mason)
Bach: Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland, BWV 659 (arr. Kanneh-Mason)
Bach: Adagio from Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C major, BWV 564 (arr. Kanneh-Mason)
Finnis: Five Preludes for Solo Cello
Villa-Lobos: Prelude from Bachianas Brasileiras No. 1 (arr. Simon Parkin)
Clapton: Layla (arr. Parkin)
Ravel: Sonata for Violin and Cello, M. 73
Dvořák: Nocturne in B major for String Orchestra, Op. 40
Bloch: From Jewish Life (arr. Christopher Palmer)

Following the Pittsburgh Symphony debut of Sheku Kanneh-Mason the night before, local concertgoers got to see many more sides of the cellist during an entry of the innovative and intimate PSO360 series. An indispensable offering at the PSO, for those who haven’t been, a guest artist bands together with select PSO musicians, and a small audience is seated in the round on the Heinz Hall stage. Entitled Soul of the Cello, the enterprising program showed the diverse potential of the instrument, and leaned heavily into music originally for other forces transcribed for cello — several of which were recorded on Kanneh-Mason’s Song album.

Sheku Kanneh-Mason with members of the PSO, photos credit Sheku Kanneh-Mason on Facebook

A trio of works by J.S. Bach began, all in transcriptions by Kanneh-Mason himself. The chorale prelude Komm, süßer Tod, komm selge Ruh opened, cast for a quintet of cellos. Deeply felt, and the resonance of five cellos was quite striking. A further chorale prelude in Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland followed — this one scored for four cellos — showing that this is music so universal it transcends the medium on which it is performed (the Busoni transcription for piano is a favorite of this writer). A pensive Adagio extracted from an organ work thoughtfully capped of this unique exploration of Bach.

Written for Kanneh-Mason in 2021 were the Five Preludes for Solo Cello by British composer Edmund Finnis. Each one of these pearls achieved a captivating expressive range in just a short span. Melodic contours were deftly shaped in the opening prelude, the second, marked Fleeting, was of minimalist gestures à la Philip Glass. The penultimate piece was underpinned by a drone, surfacing as a calming presence.

Returning to scoring for cello quintet, a pair of widely contrasting works rounded off the first half. In the remarkable suites titled Bachianas Brasileiras, composer Heitor Villa-Lobos wove Brazilian musical tradition into the style of Bach. Each is for a different combination of instruments; the first is for eight cellos. Redistributed amongst the five players on stage, it was like listening in on a close conversation amongst friends, a sentiment further encouraged by the cello’s proximity to the human voice. An energetic transcription of Eric Clapton’s Layla followed, filled with glissandos and other techniques to capture the effects of Clapton’s electric guitar. A sheer delight to see Kanneh-Mason rock out with the PSO cello section!

Opening the second half was Ravel’s remarkable duo sonata for violin and cello, a work the composer dedicated to the memory of Debussy. Kanneh-Mason teamed up with PSO concertmaster David McCarroll in a work that explored the different personalities of these string instruments. Taut communication between the two negotiated the score’s complexities. Textures in the second movement were strikingly spiked with pizzicato, and I was taken by the drive and vitality with which the work closed.

Dvořák’s Nocturne for string orchestra was sole work performed without the participation of Kanneh-Mason, affording the cellist a well-earned respite. An expanded version of the slow movement from his G major string quintet (the first movement of which was heard following a recent PSO performance), the PSO strings offered a serene, arching lyricism in this loveliest of creations.

Closing the memorable evening was Ernest Bloch’s From Jewish Life, a work originally for cello and piano. An arrangement by Christopher Palmer thoughtfully rescored the piece for solo cello buttressed by string orchestra and harp. A powerful “Prayer” began, showing the beauty of the cello and richness of the harp (Gretchen Van Hoesen). The central “Supplication” was of growing urgency, marked by a long cello line inflected by Jewish folk gestures; “Jewish Song” closed the piece in a manner more reflective than celebratory.

Sheku Kanneh-Mason and David McCarroll

Cellist Kanneh-Mason makes memorable Pittsburgh Symphony debut

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Manfred Honeck, conductor
Sheku Kanneh-Mason, cello
Heinz Hall
Pittsburgh, PA
March 21, 2025

Shekhar: Lumina
Shostakovich: Cello Concerto No. 1 in E-flat major, Op. 107
 Encore: I Say a Little Prayer
Strauss: Don Juan, Op. 20
Strauss: Symphonic Fantasy from Arabella, Op. 79 (arr. Honeck/Ille)

The Pittsburgh Symphony is to be commended for its advocacy of contemporary music, with many of this season’s programs introducing a recent work by a living composer. This week’s program began with the 2020 work Lumina by Nina Shekhar. Shekhar is currently a doctoral student in music composition at Princeton (presumably classmates with Hannah Ishizaki, featured on a PSO program a month ago). The composer also draws from an engineering background, evident in the present work that concerns the spectrum of light.

Sheku Kanneh-Mason with Manfred Honeck and the Pittsburgh Symphony

It’s a work that demands attention from both performers and audience. Silence is just as important as sound, and effects are achieved through subtle, nearly imperceptible gestures: microtones, harmonics, bowing of the vibraphone. A soft-spoken essay, it occasionally burgeoned into strident climaxes. I’m not sure this is a piece that fully earned the attention it required, yet I appreciate the PSO’s attention to a rising composer.

The main draw of the evening was the Pittsburgh debut of cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason in the Cello Concerto No. 1 of Shostakovich. Kanneh-Mason drew a fittingly gritty tone out of his Matteo Goffriller instrument that dates from 1700, delivering a variation on the composer’s musical signature with a caustic bite. The cellist was flexible and limber, imbuing the score with character and color. Manfred Honeck and the PSO supported the soloist with piquant accompaniment. Unusually for Shostakovich, the horn is the only brass instrument used — a tip of the hat to William Caballero for single-handedly serving as the brass section. The Moderato was of desolate, pained lyricism, reduced to a skeletal orchestration.

Like the composer’s First Violin Concerto, an extended cadenza served as effectively a standalone movement in the heart of the work. One was struck by Kanneh-Mason’s expressive range — and while not an overtly virtuosic affair, the cellist showed a deep command of his instrument. The finale was quintessential Shostakovich in both its urgency and coloristic writing, up to the blistering end. As an encore, Kanneh-Mason offered a transcription I Say a Little Prayer, the Burt Bacharach song made famous by both Dionne Warwick and Aretha Franklin — a lovely piece in its jazzy pizzicato (for a recording, see Kanneh-Mason’s warmly recommend album Song).

The second half was devoted to Richard Strauss, beginning with his iconic tone poem Don Juan. Its opening was akin to drinking from a firehose, with blazing virtuosity and brassy splendor. The music crested to searing passions, highlighted by a long and languid oboe solo from Cynthia Koledo DeAlmeida. By the coda, matters came crashing down for a tragic, somber end.

Closing the program was an appealing alternative to the more well-worn tone poems, in the world premiere of a suite based on Strauss’ opera Arabella. Conceived by Manfred Honeck and arranged by Tomáš Ille (a team that has previously devised suites based on Elektra and Janáček’s Jenůfa), it captured the essence of the opera in a span of eighteen minutes. A bold, dense opening was arresting in its rich chromaticism. A lilting waltz — in a similar spirit to Rosenkavalier — contrasted, and the PSO’s superb playing brought out a gorgeous lyricism, leading to a brilliant close.

PUBLIQuartet challenges convention at Chamber Music Pittsburgh

PUBLIQuartet
PNC Theatre
Pittsburgh Playhouse
Pittsburgh, PA
March 10, 2025

PUBLIQuartet: What is American? Improvisations on Dvořák’s “American” Quartet
Vijay Iyer: Dig the Say
Mazz Swift: Digging Gold; Deeper Blue 
Henry Threadgill: Sixfivetwo
Jeff Scott: Blues for Buddy
Jlin: Baobab
Sun Ra: Interstellar Low Ways
Duke Ellington: “Come Sunday” from Black, Brown, and Beige
Julia Perry: Prelude for Piano (arr. Hamilton Berry)
PUBLIQuartet: Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues. Improvisations on Tina Turner’s “Black Coffee,” Betty Davis’ “They Say I’m Different,” Alice Coltrane’s “Er Ra,” and Ida Cox’s “Wild Women Don’t Have the Blues”

Monday evening saw the Pittsburgh debut of the New York-based PUBLIQuartet in a diverse, inventive program at Chamber Music Pittsburgh. Entitled “Found Futures”, the program focused on particularly forward-thinking composers as part of the quartet’s larger project, What is American. An ambitious offering, the selections offered bore little resemblance to what one might expect at a typical string quartet recital.

PUBLIQuartet, photo credit publiquartet.com

The evening began with one of PUBLIQuartet’s own creations, an improvisation based upon Dvořák’s American quartet (and the original version will be heard at Chamber Music Pittsburgh’s next event with the Dover Quartet). PQ has recast the entire work in their invigoratingly idiosyncratic style, but offered just the first movement on Monday. Nebulous beginnings were achieved through a panoply of extended techniques, and Dvořák’s sunny theme emerged out of the ether. A tapestry of American styles were woven into Dvořák’s music, traversing elements of blues, jazz, rock, and hip-hop.

Vijay Iyer’s Dig the Say was a tribute to the music of James Brown — never before have I heard a string quartet sound so groovy! Pizzicato cello served as a funky bass line, and the ensemble was asked to clap and stomp to further enliven this colorful score. Digging Gold; Deeper Blue by Mazz Swift followed. With elements of improvisation, it was a complex, multi-threaded score of interlocking intricacies, akin to solving a puzzle.

Henry Threadgill’s Sixfivetwo came about as part of the Kronos Quartet’s staggeringly ambitious 50 for the Future endeavor (see here for my review of Kronos performing several works from that project). PUBLIQuartet astutely negotiated the complex score, though to my ears it wasn’t a piece particularly approachable on first listen. A work by Jeff Scott (horn player and founding member of the Imani Winds) closed the first half, Blues for Buddy. Scott revealed to the quartet that Buddy was his late uncle, and the brief but touching work looked inward, sounding as a bluesy elegy.

Like the Scott piece, Jlin’s Baobab was also commissioned by the PUBLIQuartet. An electronic music composer, Jlin had the group improvise over pre-recorded electronica, oftentimes evoking an African drumming ensemble. Three transcriptions for string quartet followed, beginning with music based upon Sun Ra’s Interstellar Low Ways in its first performance. “Come Sunday” from Duke Ellington’s jazz symphony Black, Brown, and Beige was languid and pensive, proving to be effective when cast for these forces.

Originally for solo piano, a prelude by Julia Perry was given in a transcription by PQ’s cellist Hamilton Berry, showing its rich, forward-looking harmonic palette (one is further referred to a recent recording of Perry’s violin concerto by PQ violinist Curtis Stewart). Closing the evening was another PQ original, Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues, featuring the group’s improvisations and musical reflections on female singer-songwriters from generations past: Tina Turner, Betty Davis, Alice Coltrane, and Ida Cox.

Honeck leads lavish program of varied Viennese repertoire in Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Manfred Honeck, conductor
Emanuel Ax, piano
Heinz Hall
Pittsburgh, PA
February 21, 2025

Ishizaki: Spin
Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 25 in C major, K503
 Encore:
 Chopin: Nocturne No. 7 in C-sharp minor, Op. 27 No. 1
Korngold: Symphony in F-sharp major, Op. 40

All three works on Manfred Honeck’s generous Pittsburgh Symphony engaged in some fashion with the rich musical heritage of Vienna. The opening turned to a local voice, 24-year-old Pittsburgh area native Hannah Ishizaki, currently a doctoral student in music composition at Princeton (see NEXTpittsburgh for a lovely interview). Receiving its world premiere was Spin, a five-minute curtain-raiser that drew on dance traditions as disparate as Viennese waltz and electronic dance music.

Pre-concert interview with piccolo Rhian Kenny, composer Hannah Ishizaki, and assistant conductor Moon Doh

The work began almost in media res, as if it had always been in motion, dropping the needle in the thick of things. Driving rhythms made for an exciting listen, and Ishizaki made skillful use of the large orchestra she employed. A homecoming for the composer, writing for this orchestra in this hall is not without deep personal significance. A solo passage invoking a kinetic dance club beat was given to the contrabassoon, whom the composer counts as a mentor.

There’s hardly a more choice soloist in a Mozart piano concerto than Emanuel Ax, and the regal no. 25 in C major was a particularly fine vehicle for the pianist’s pearly technique and refined interpretation. A bold opening was fitting for one of the composer’s grandest conceptions in the medium, and the orchestra offered a nuanced reading, with detailed inflections and attention to the inner voices. The pianist’s entry was in the shape of just a single line, hesitant at first, before its full flourishing, displaying the crystalline, rippling playing of this masterful Mozartean.

Easily surmounting the decorative trills, rapid scales, and other technical demands, Ax also offered his own cadenza, an essay artfully expressive and wide-ranging. The central Andante served as a songful blending of piano and orchestra, and the finale brimmed with Viennese elegance, pointed and articulate. More so than the typical Mozart finale, it also probed the lyrical, particularly when Ax was in a lovely dialogue with the winds. A warmly enthusiastic reception — Ax seemed visibly moved — brought him back for an encore in a Chopin nocturne, a quantity which starkly contrasted the languid and the dramatic.

Something of a Mozart of his day, Erich Wolfgang Korngold was a prodigy in Vienna of extraordinary precocity. Fleeing the Nazis, he then found fame and fortune in Hollywood where he became one of the first major composers of film scores (John Williams cites him as a major influence). His sole symphony dates from the mid-1950s and is cast in the unusual key of F-sharp major. It’s not a work one encounters in concert often, but seems to have had a resurgence lately — a performance by the Berlin Philharmonic was quite memorable for this listener, and The Cleveland Orchestra has also programmed it in a recent season.

A jagged primary theme took shape in the clarinet, teetering on the brink of tonality, but firmly residing in the late Romantic tradition. Honeck and the PSO delivered a bracing, razor-sharp reading of this dense score with singular drama. As sumptuous as it gets, it’s almost to the point of excess and — as if one perhaps had a few too many slices of sachertorte. A high-octane scherzo followed, further showing the variegated color spectrum, with particularly piquant splashes from the piano and celesta. Matters were at the very edge of control without ever falling into chaos, and the brass passages had the cinematic effect of a film score.

Korngold looked towards Austrian compatriot Anton Bruckner in the towering slow movement, conceived in this case as a memorial to FDR. Brass and strings resounded through Heinz Hall, swelling to lush textures, though a solo passage for flute was delicately forlorn. The finale returned to the vigor and angular gestures of the opening, and militant brass fanfares threaded George M. Cohan’s Over There into the score. A welcome opportunity to hear a major if infrequently performed work — and certainly a highlight of the PSO season thus far.

In a brief post-concert performance, a quintet of PSO string players offered the first movement of Dvořák’s String Quintet No. 2, Op. 77. The use of double bass gives this work an orchestral heft, and made for a delightful capstone to the Dvořák heard the previous week.

Manfred Honeck, Emanuel Ax, and the Pittsburgh Symphony

Elder leads Pittsburgh Symphony in brooding Sibelius, Shostakovich – and an interlude in the English countryside

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Sir Mark Elder, conductor
Cynthia Koledo DeAlmeida, oboe
Heinz Hall
Pittsburgh, PA
January 31, 2025

Sibelius: Pohjola’s Daughter, Op. 49
Vaughan Williams: Concerto in A minor for Oboe and Strings
Shostakovich: Symphony No. 15 in A major, Op. 141

Sir Mark Elder is certainly a conductor with a knack for devising intriguing and offbeat programs, and his Friday night appearance with the Pittsburgh Symphony was no exception. Sibelius’ tone poem Pohjola’s Daughter opened, beginning with darkly brooding material from the cellos. Vigorous brass joined in the lush orchestration, though any glimmers of hope in this grisly tale from the Kalevala were duly snuffed out for its quiet, somber ending. On either side of the stage, plot events from the source material were projected in sync with the music — though Sibelius’ writing is so detailed, one hardly needed it.

Sir Mark Elder, Cynthia Koledo DeAlmeida, and the Pittsburgh Symphony, photo credit Josh Milteer

Vaughan Williams’ 1944 Oboe Concerto followed, featuring PSO principal Cynthia Koledo DeAlmeida. This is a work the PSO has performed only once before, and nearly 30 years ago. DeAlmeida served as soloist in that performance as well, and in prerecorded remarks, she reflected on playing it as a relatively new addition to the PSO’s ranks, to now revisiting it decades later as a seasoned member.

Because the oboe doesn’t project particularly well, Vaughan Williams reduced the orchestral accompaniment to strings alone. The concerto serves as a companion piece to the composer’s Fifth Symphony (the “Pastoral”): it, too, purveys a ponderous pastoralism, and the concerto’s finale came from sketches originally intended for the symphony. DeAlmeida offered a lyrical, songful tone, keenly phrased and in delicate balance with her stringed colleagues. Cadenzas at various intervals showed her limber and dexterous.

The central movement took its cue from English country dances, sprightly and charming. The closing scherzo traversed the oboe’s range, and saw the soloist in fleet interplay with the orchestra. A closing section returned to the tender and reflective, and theme that perhaps interpolates The Last Rose of Summer in quintessential English fashion.

Shostakovich’s Fifteenth and final symphony occupied the latter half. Quite unlike any of the composer’s previous groundbreaking works in the form — or any symphony that came before or after, for that matter — it reflects on a lifetime of turmoil and triumphant in idiosyncratic fashion. Pings in the glockenspiel began, answered by a silvery flute — flippant and unsettled as only Shostakovich could do. Themes from William Tell and other works were seamlessly woven in, an eerie soundscape with the composer in a dreamlike trance of music by others that resonated with him.

A low brass chorale opened the lugubrious slow movement, highlighted by a devastatingly austere cello solo (Anne Martindale Williams). Angular material in the clarinet marked the Allegretto, along with a fine solo from concertmaster David McCarroll. Echoes of Wagner and many others were heard in the eclectic finale, as if Shostakovich wanted to use the final movement of his final symphony to comprehensively reflect on all that inspired him. The ticking of clocks, achieved through woodblocks (a device previously used in his iconoclastic Fourth Symphony), made for an ending as extraordinary as it was enigmatic.

Pittsburgh Opera resident artists shine in Haydn’s Armida

Pittsburgh Opera
Antony Walker, conductor
Haley Stamats, director

Matthew Soibelman, Idreno
Lauryn Davis, Armida
Fran Daniel Laucerica, Rinaldo
Erik Nordstrom, Ubaldo
Audrey Welsh, Clotarca
Shannon Crowley, Zelmira

CAPA School Theater
Pittsburgh, PA
January 28, 2025

Haydn: Armida, Hob. XXVIII:12

The overwhelming majority of the standard opera repertoire dates from the 19th and into the early 20th centuries. Hearing a work outside that admittedly fertile era is always a welcome opportunity, afforded locally in late January by Pittsburgh Opera’s presentation of Haydn’s 1784 dramma eroico, Armida. The subject matter deals with the First Crusade, and inspired a litany of music, including earlier operatic treatments by Handel (Rinaldo) and Lully (Armide).

Armida (Lauryn Davis), photos credit David Bachman Photography for Pittsburgh Opera

The forces Armida required conveniently allowed all eight members of this year’s corps of resident artists a moment in the spotlight — six vocalists, along with pianist Maeve Berry and assistant stage director Dana Kinney. The Pittsburgh Opera Orchestra under the baton of Antony Walker opened crisp and articulate, just as adept in the late 18th-century style as they are in Puccini — though I did find the obvious electronic sound of the continuo a bit jarring. Bass Matthew Soibelman made the first vocal appearance in a declamatory recitative.

A troupe of dancers from Attack Theatre added a further expressive dimension to the performance, and provided narrative in the absence of text. I particularly enjoyed the various duets when the singers’ voices harmoniously blended — Audrey Welsh as Clotarca (originally, a tenor named Clotarco, but rescored and renamed here to fit the mezzo-soprano) with Shannon Crowley as Zelmira, and certainly the two leads: Fran Daniel Laucerica’s loving and longing take on Rinaldo, with Lauryn Davis as the imposing titular sorceress. With elements of the supernatural achieved through clever staging, the work ultimately drew to a dark and stormy end in this quintessential opera seria.

Armida (Lauryn Davis), nymphs (dancers courtesy of Attack Theatre), Idreno (Matthew Soibelman), Rinaldo (Fran Daniel Laucerica)

Tommy Mesa and Michelle Cann warm a cold evening with colorful recital

Tommy Mesa, cello
Michelle Cann, piano
PNC Theatre
Pittsburgh Playhouse
Pittsburgh, PA
January 20, 2025

Nadia Boulanger: Three Pieces for Cello and Piano
Debussy: Cello Sonata in D minor, L135
Kevin Day: Sonata for Cello and Piano
Casarrubios: Mensajes del agua
Shostakovich: Cello Sonata in D minor, Op. 40

Encore:
Rachmaninoff: Andante from Cello Sonata in G minor, Op. 19

If one longed for an escape from the presidential inauguration and the bitter cold temperatures, Chamber Music Pittsburgh offered a perfect solution the night of January 20 by way of a cello and piano recital. Cuban-American cellist Tommy Mesa was joined by Michelle Cann, and the duo offered a wide-ranging, diverse program, ripe with musical discovery.

Michelle Cann and Tommy Mesa at the PNC Theater, photo credit Chamber Music Pittsburgh

Better known as a pedagogue of enormous influence, Nadia Boulanger was also an accomplished composer in her own right (as was her far too short-lived sister, Lili). The first of her Three Pieces for Cello and Piano boasted an expressive cello melody, underpinned by rippling gestures in the piano’s upper register. The middle piece served as a gentle interlude before the fiery close which saw extrovert playing from both parties to round off these finely crafted gems.

Near the end of his life, Debussy embarked on a set of six sonatas for various instrumental combinations. Sadly, only three were completed, the first being a brief but impactful cello sonata. Introductory material in the piano evidenced a unique soundscape, even for Debussy. Rich tone in the cello and dramatic playing in the piano made for a captivating effect, and yielded a language markedly different from the German tradition (this sonata is worlds apart from the Brahms cello sonatas, for instance). The central Sérénade showed Debussy as the master of effect, with ample use of pizzicato, glissando, and most strikingly, flautando – bowing in such a way as to create a flute-like sound. An interlude that brought to mind the charm of Children’s Corner, ahead of a playful finale that brimmed with Gallic elegance.

A 2016 cello sonata from West Virginia composer Kevin Day closed the first half. Though Day’s first work for the medium, its skillful writing grabbed one in from the beginning with its piquant harmonies and energetic syncopations. The central Lento was especially lovely with a long melody high in the cello’s range, with the piano gently pulsing. The sonata reached a satisfying close with a vigorous, driving finale. Mesa and Cann included this work on their warmly recommended album Our Stories, featuring works by Black and Latinx composers.

Andrea Casarrubios is another composer included on the album, represented in the present program by her work Mensajes del agua (“Messages from water”). Meant to depict the perfection of frozen water, it was meditative in its glacial stillness, and though textures were sparse, it purveyed a deep lyricism. Nikolai Kapustin’s Elegy was originally slotted on the program but jettisoned Monday evening, for which Mesa offered apologies to the Kapustin fans in the audience — a population to which I emphatically identify!

Any disappointment was easily allayed by the masterful performance of Shostakovich’s great cello sonata which closed. The first movement saw pointed articulation and a directness of expression, with Mesa’s burnished tone well-suited to the work. Despite its seeming simplicity, subtleties beneath the surface abounded for both instruments, with Shostakovich ever the subversive. A Largo section was marked by ominous pizzicato figures.

The brief Allegro second movement was perhaps the most remarkable, filled with colorful, sardonic writing. There was somber tragedy in the slow movement, with the cello nearly matching the human voice, and Mesa’s ample vibrato yielded a pained lyricism. A finale was in equal parts playful and gritty, drawing comparison to the composer’s First Piano Concerto from the previous year.

As an encore, the duo offered the slow movement from another great Russian cello sonata: Rachmaninoff’s G minor work. A sumptuously gorgeous close to the evening.

Pittsburgh Symphony rings in holiday season with a joyous Messiah

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Manfred Honeck, conductor

Mendelssohn Choir of Pittsburgh
Daniel Singer, director

Jeanine De Bique, soprano
Reginald Mobley, countertenor
John Matthew Myers, tenor
Joshua Hopkins, baritone

Heinz Hall
Pittsburgh, PA
December 7, 2024

Handel: Messiah, HWV 56

If there’s a sign the holiday season is upon us, surely it would be a performance of Handel’s timeless oratorio Messiah — although it’s worth remembering that its first performance coincided instead with Easter. Buttressing Manfred Honeck and the Pittsburgh Symphony was the Mendelssohn Choir and a quartet of vocal soloists — two of which along with the Choir were featured in the previous night’s performance of the Fauré Requiem.

Reginald Mobley (cropped), Jeanine De Bique, John Matthew Myers, and Joshua Hopkins perform with Honeck and the PSO. Photos credit Josh Milteer / Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra

As is often done, cuts were made to the present performance with Honeck artfully selecting 41 of the 53 segments for a brisk 90 minutes of music. The opening Sinfonia for orchestra alone was crisply articulated, a stern, minor-key affair in sharp contrast from the exultant quality of most of the work. Tenor John Matthew Myers had the first vocal appearance of the evening in “Comfort ye, my people,” purveying a smooth, lyrical tone that was comforting indeed.

Baritone Joshua Hopkins maintained an imposing vocal presence, apparent from his entry in the recitative “Thus saith the Lord.” A highlight of the generally more introspective Part II of the work came in Hopkins’ aria “Why do the nations so furiously rage” — and one longs for a year when this isn’t so topical. “The trumpet shall sound” from the third and final part was fittingly bright with tenor and trumpet in clarion conversation.

Reginald Mobley offered a flexible countertenor, wide in range and elastic in melisma. “Behold, a virgin shall conceive” saw him in delicate dialogue with the principal strings and continuo. All selections that featured the soloists were for a single performer, save for “O death, where is thy sting?” which engaged Mobley and Hopkins in duet. Their voices blended harmoniously — a pity there weren’t more opportunities to hear the quartet in concert with each other.

Appearing for the first time near the end of Part I was soprano Jeanine De Bique, delicate and nuanced. She was particularly angelic in Part III’s aria “I know that my Redeemer liveth,” decorated in tinsel by high and strings and organ. “If God be for us” was a poignant and intimate moment ahead of the exuberant close, with solo passages from the concertmaster and cello touchingly decorating the soprano’s vocal line.

Of course the star of any Messiah performance is the chorus, and the Mendelssohn Choir delivered in spades. “And the Glory of the Lord,” marked their entry, delivering with clarity the intricate, multi-layered choral writing. The Hallelujah chorus, recognizable far beyond the confines of the concert hall, was festive and bright, and the audience followed the time-honored tradition of rising to their feet. “Worthy is the Lamb” closed the evening in the brilliance and weight of the full ensemble.

The PSO performs Handel’s Messiah at Heinz Hall

Honeck and Pittsburgh Symphony offer delectable potpourri in Thanksgiving program

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Manfred Honeck, conductor
Steven Banks, saxophone
Heinz Hall
Pittsburgh, PA
December 1, 2024

Weber: Overture to Der Freischütz
Tomasi: Concerto for Alto Saxophone
Strauss II: Overture to Die Fledermaus
Strauss II: Éljen a Magyar!, Op. 332
Puccini: Intermezzo from Act III of Manon Lescaut
Strauss II: Leichtes Blut, Op. 319
Banks: Strength of My Life from Come As You Are (arr. Corey Dundee)
Strauss II: Kaiser-Walzer, Op. 437
Strauss II: Auf der Jagd, Op. 373

Encores:
Josef Strauss: Feurfest!, Op. 269
Strauss Sr.: Radetzky-Marsch, Op. 228

In a standing tradition, the Pittsburgh Symphony presented a populist Thanksgiving program highlighted by a brimming selection of waltzes, polkas, and marches from the Strauss family. The first half began on a rather more serious note, however, opening with the overture to Weber’s landmark opera Der Freischütz.

Steven Banks, Manfred Honeck, and the PSO. Photo credit Manfred Honeck on Facebook

A long-bowed melody in the arching strings was tempered by warm chorales from the Pittsburgh brass. With vigor, darker material took over in full-fledged operatic drama, though in the end the triumphant conclusion won the day.

A rarity followed in the 1949 Alto Saxophone Concerto by Henri Tomasi, a quantity for the PSO debut of Steven Banks. A modernist soundscape was drawn from its piquant bitonalities, and the lyrical potential of the saxophone was exploited to remarkable effect — a markedly distinct style from the jazz sound one is more accustomed to. The Allegro section that followed the concerto’s introductory remarks was of a coloristic mid-century aesthetic, with a lively orchestration to boot, and Banks traversed a wide array of tone and timbre.

The closing Giration-Final saw the soloist dazzle in rapid fingerwork, and the movement’s dance inflections added to its excitement. As an encore, Banks offered The Lord’s Prayer, a slow and lyrical paragraph that showed yet another side of his instrument — and the power it has to resound unaccompanied.

The Strauss-heavy latter half was very much in the spirit of a Vienna Philharmonic New Year’s Concert, as if Heinz Hall was momentarily morphed into the golden Musikverein (and one should also be reminded that an authentic Austrian-style Christmas market lies a few blocks away at Market Square). One could have hardly asked for a more informed interpreter than Austrian native Manfred Honeck.

Lithe and elegant, the overture to the operetta Die Fledermaus fizzed with vigor and flamboyance. Hungarian folk melodies — including echoes of the indelible Rákóczi March — were woven in the exuberant Éljen a Magyar! Rather different but equally appealing was an intermezzo from Puccini’s Manon Lescaut, lush and filled with longing. Harps swelled for a sumptuous texture, further encouraged by fine playing from the solo cello.

Banks returned to showcase his own composition entitled Come As You Are. Originally scored for tenor saxophone and piano, the suite is a lovely tribute to his faith and family. On offer was an arrangement for tenor sax and strings of the third movement “Strength of My Life.” Touchingly reflective, it was well-suited to the rich, mellow sound of the tenor.

Back to Strauss. The Emperor Waltzes were fittingly regal, and Auf der Jagd concluded the printed program complete with some humorous theatrics. Honeck and the PSO indulged the audience with a pair of encores beginning with Feuerfest! from the pen of Johann Jr’s brother Josef. Brought to life by use of the anvil, it was only outdone by the rambunctious Radetzky March.

In a post-concert performance, the Pittsburgh Cello Quartet (comprised of four PSO cellists) offered a brief selection of mostly holiday fare. More memorable was a transcription of Poulenc’s pensive O magnum mysterium.

Ébène and Belcea quartets combine forces at Chamber Music Pittsburgh

Ébène Quartet
Belcea Quartet
Carnegie Music Hall
Pittsburgh, PA
November 12, 2024

Mendelssohn: String Octet in E-flat major, Op. 20
Enescu: String Octet in C major, Op. 7

Encore:
Fauré: In paradisum from Requiem, Op. 48

In a special presentation from Chamber Music Pittsburgh, two major string quartets – the Ébène and the Belcea – joined together for an evening of octets. Far and above the most recognizable work of the string octet literature is Mendelssohn’s sterling example, a quantity which was paired with a less familiar octet by George Enescu. Remarkably, this was an evening of music composed by teenagers – Mendelssohn was a prodigious 16-year-old when writing his; Enescu was hardly far behind at 19. 

Ébène and Belcea quartets at Chamber Music Pittsburgh

The Mendelssohn opened the program warm and gracious, with a lushly flowing melody from the violin. The eight players on the Carnegie Music Hall stage collectively drew a rich orchestral heft, sounding not as eight soloists or two quartets, but a single, unified organism. A more playful contrasting theme danced in its delicate interplay.

The Andante movement was plaintive and pensive. Just few minutes in duration, the scherzo defined and crystallized the very term Mendelssohnian: fleet and gossamer, it was given with a featherlight touch, the musicians perfectly in sync. Furious gestures from the cello opened the finale, with the others joining in succession in a wide-ranging fugato. A movement of great drama, given here with exacting clarity and attention to detail. 

Enescu almost certainly looked to Mendelssohn for inspiration when writing his own octet, but it’s a work that nonetheless bears his individual voice. Some changes were made to the seating arrangement on stage, alternating which players commanded the primo parts. A full-bodied tone and textural richness made for a bracing beginning. The melodic line had some striking harmonic inflections, perhaps a nod to the folk music of the composer’s native Romania. The performers illuminated the opening movement’s complex form, and the work proved an intriguing discovery (though admittedly, anything can seem a letdown after the Mendelssohn – perhaps the Enescu would have been better positioned being programmed first?). 

A sudden contrast was had in the following movement, marked with the French Très fougueux (“very fiery”). Spiky, angular material was given with impassioned – and yes, fiery – playing, and a beguiling chord progression served as a transition to the slow movement. Calm and stillness pervaded before the coruscating and bold finale, capping off this ambitious work in grand form. 

As an encore, the ensemble offered a transcription for octet of the closing In paradisum from Fauré’s Requiem – which also served to whet one’s appetite for the Pittsburgh Symphony’s upcoming performance of the work. With some particularly lovely pizzicato material given to the viola, it served as a gorgeously beautiful close to the evening.