(Bryan Cheng. Pic
supplied)
Review by David Smith of
the KwaZulu-Natal Philharmonic Orchestra’s World Symphony Series, Summer
Season, Concert 1, March 5, 2026, in The Playhouse Opera
The task of reviewing symphony concerts by the KZNPO has
currently to make considerable allowances: on the side of the orchestra,
because of the continuing reliance on ad hoc players (especially in the string
section; the winds have firmed up in recent months), and the limited
opportunities to essay even the staples of the symphonic repertoire; and on the
side of the listeners, the breakdown in regular exposure, wherein a degree of
healthy routine, even ritual, undergirds the ever-changing surface. A symphony
concert is becoming a red-letter day, an event removed from continuing musical
life, and the expectations are correspondingly exaggerated.
It was our good fortune last week to have the stable hand of
Yasuo Shinozaki guiding activities from the podium. His reliability explains
his frequent visits to Durban, and hopefully will ensure further appearances as
long as the orchestra has the resources to mount serious concerts of this kind.
The first half of the concert – with Benjamin Britten’s Simple Symphony sandwiched
between two of Saint-Saëns’s cello concertos – gave him ample scope to nail all
the aspects. (He was repeating music presented a week ago in Johannesburg, but
with a fresh ensemble.)
The Britten work went way beyond the string pieces
programmed in recent months. Shinozaki galvanised his players into an account
full of vigour and sprightliness. With tight, precise ensemble, exemplary
balance and tonal variety, and a slow movement of aching lyricism, a work
without obvious connection to the overall programme came into its own. It was
to the credit of both conductor and players that music inserted to give the
soloist a breather shouldered its way to the front of our attention.
The second blessing of the evening was a return visit by the
Canadian cellist, Bryan Cheng, whose South African
concerts have involved him for the first time in this Saint-Saëns double-decker
– a ‘marathon’, to use his own word.
Starting with the second concerto, he instantly reassured us
that he was on top form, and that we were hearing the same mature reading that
he plays widely, in a vital recreation. This concerto is less directly dramatic
than the first that was to follow, and it was a joy to relish its changing
tides, the careering figures giving way to fine-spun cantabile. While Cheng’s
impetuous attack and his thrilling traversals of technical minefields are
celebrated, he also finds in these works an unforced spaciousness that adds
depth to music that could be pigeonholed as ‘niche’ and leaning to the
complacent.
Chang’s finest cello is a 1696 ‘Bonjour’ Stradivarius
instrument. If this was indeed that instrument, it provided him with the
perfect palette, and invested the ‘marathon’ with a rosy, well-projected tone
that was comfortable to listen to. Suitably, his encore was Saint-Saëns’s most
famous melody, The Swan, with its
rippling piano part arranged by the soloist for three cellos, thus providing an
intimate collegial moment.
The much shorter second half was occupied by Schubert’s
Symphony No. 8, the ‘Unfinished’, a familiar work whose two movements are
played for their inherent quality rather than their sustained argument. The
first movement was played without its main repeat, and breathed an attractive
flowing air that really might have been extended. The second felt somewhat
variable, with small imperfections like woodwind intonation and some imprecise
ensemble. But, overall, it was sensitive, intentioned playing, even if it could
not match the incandescence of the first half of the programme. - David Smith
NB: The second and
final concert of the KZNPO Summer Series takes place tomorrow night (March 12)
in the Playhouse Opera. Booking is through Quicket.
Booking link for tomorrow's concert is
https://qkt.io/Pbbgil
There will be no open
morning rehearsal.
To link to the KZNPO's website, click on the advert at the top right-hand side of this review.