Northampton Symphony Orchestra concert
21 June 2023
Northampton Symphony Orchestra conductor John Gibbons and the NSO committee have been doing a wonderful job in making each of our recent concerts feel like a significant event - not just another orchestral concert but a truly special occasion. Last Saturday’s NSO concert certainly fell into this category as we provided a rare opportunity to experience a live performance of Dimitri Shostakovich’s epic ‘Symphony No 11: The Year 1905’. Written at the time of the 40th anniversary of the 1917 Russian revolution, Shostakovich negotiated his troubled relationship with the Soviet authorities with typical ambiguity by appearing both to celebrate and undermine the anniversary, creating a programmatic work focussing on the failed 1905 revolution. In January 1905 a peaceful protest outside the Tsar’s Winter Palace in St Petersburg turned into a massacre with the Imperial Guard killing around 1,000 protesters. The symphony has the feel of a film score, following the events of that tragic day from peaceful calm to brutal slaughter. It is an incredibly exciting piece of music, with huge dynamic ranges that really need to be heard live. The relentless energy of the final movement, driven by a deafening array of percussion instruments, conjures up the onslaught of Soviet tanks, perhaps suggesting much later military interventions. Our NSO performance of this amazing work was thrilling and owed much to an excellent percussion section (Keith Crompton, Nathan Burt, Matt Butler, Delwyn Calcraft-Jones, Tina Kenny and Huw Morgan). Also memorable was the incredibly moving unison melody played by the entire viola section in the slow third movement ('In Memoriam'). I was pleased to get my brief quiet solo horn fanfare out of the way at the beginning of the first movement and I was in awe of Terry Mayo who had to produce the same solo fanfare on trumpet repeatedly throughout the symphony. But I have even more respect for Harriet Brown whose substantial cor anglais solo comes almost at the end of the final movement and who must have had nerves of steel to play this gentle lament so beautifully after having to wait through the whole of the thunderous, emotional symphony for this moment of gentle reflection. This video gives a really interesting overview of Shostakovich’s 11th Symphony: Shostakovich: How to Compose a Massacre: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RU7a1b4yE-Q We opened the concert with the ‘William Tell Overture’ by Rossini, with a gorgeous cello solo by Corinne Malitskie. And the concert also featured a rare performance of Hamilton Harty’s setting of ‘Ode to a Nightingale’ by John Keats (from which F Scott Fitzgerald took the line ‘tender is the night’). It’s a lovely piece, brilliantly sung in our concert by the Irish soprano Alison Roddy. Hamilton Harty’s orchestration creates a Wagnerian feel with elements of Elgar and Richard Strauss. It is another great piece of music I have enjoyed getting to know by playing it. You can listen to ‘Ode to a Nightingale’ performed by Heather Harper with the Ulster Orchestra conducted by Bryden Thomson at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVVoWOjWKTM