Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Northampton Symphony Orchestra concert

27 October 2021

Last Saturday I played in my first live concert since the moving experience of performing Beethoven’s ‘Symphony No 5’ with Milton Keynes Sinfonia just before the start of the first lockdown in March 2020 (reviewed here in March 2020). This was the first Northampton Symphony Orchestra concert since we played Bruckner’s ‘Symphony No 4’ in February last year (reviewed here in February 2020) and it felt wonderful to be back in front of a live audience again. Saturday’s concert at St Matthew’s Church in Northampton was a spectacular return for the NSO, marking the centenary of the birth, in Northampton, of the composer Sir Malcom Arnold - who actually played in the NSO himself as a young man. We started with Arnold’s ‘A Grand Grand Festival Overture’, a notorious piece which features three vacuum cleaners and a floor polisher. It was quite an achievement - by several members of the orchestra - merely to track down the vintage vacuum cleaners needed to make the required sound. Our four soloists did a great job cleaning the floor of the church in precise formation, co-ordinated by elaborate hand signals from conductor John Gibbons, before all four were felled by rifle shots aimed by the NSO’s newly appointed President - our recently retired principal trumpet, Nick Bunker. Quite what the new orchestra leader Emily Groom made of this eccentric introduction to the NSO I am not sure but the audience certainly enjoyed the bizarre spectacle. We followed the overture with a completely different example of Malcolm Arnold’s orchestral writing, his ‘Symphony No 2’, composed in 1953. Although the symphony features some of Arnold’s trademark jollity (particularly in the final movement) it is quite a serious piece with a stunning, bleak, Mahlerian slow movement. The symphony, and especially the slow movement, has really grown on me during our rehearsals. I think our performance went very well, with beautiful playing from Naomi Muller on clarinet in the sparse opening to the first movement and a very impressive bassoon solo from Sian Bunker at the beginning of the third movement. We finished the concert in more familiar territory with the ever-popular ‘Symphony No 3’ by Camille Saint-Saens - the ‘Organ Symphony’. It’s a lovely piece with a surprisingly challenging Third Horn part, wonderfully played by Callie Scully. The famous moment when the thunderous organ chords, played by Justin Miller, herald the start of the finale felt incredibly emotional: it was so good to return to live music after the long break caused by the pandemic.

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