REVIEW: Benedetti steals WSO hearts and inspires glory
A TRIUMPHANT Worthing Symphony Orchestra concert sent new fans out of the Assembly Hall vowing to return after Nicola Benedetti played Bruch's cherished concerto with, she told the band, "The best orchestra I have played this work with".
Like the latest WSO converts, the 21-year-old former BBC Young Musician of the Year could be back also. She is considering conductor John Gibbons' proposal to play Brahms' Double Concerto next season. "It was a lovely audience here," she said afterwards, "and the acoustic is so great."
Originally intending to play the Beethoven, she switched to the Bruch No 1 recently but too late to change the posters (though not the preview publicity).
Thereby lay the only dissatisfied customers among the 800 present. But only the churlish would have been disappointed to arrive and find this exciting artiste playing a concerto they hadn't expected to hear.
Here was a Scottish lass on a programme of nearly all "Scottish" music. A racy, fitted silky kingfisher blue, sleeveless and full-length dress flared from under her bottom downwards at the back and from her knees at the front. "By Amanda Wakeley," she told me afterwards.
And the Italian ancestry combined with the Celtic as, hair flying, she tore into her first lengthy theme.
The orchestra sounded magnificent and on fire from the first tutti onwards — a situation that continued to the end of the concert when, after Edmund Rubbra's attractive Tribute, to Ralph Vaughan Williams, came Mendelssohn's excellent Scottish Symphony.
It was not only the thought of shedding years and performing with this young lady celebrity that stoked the WSO flames. Conductor John Gibbons gave them William Alwyn's entertaining Suite of Scottish Dances as a warm-up. How could anything entitled that not be fun to play?
Benedetti's spontaneity is genuine and her dynamic range is wide. After her fiercely attacked cadenza and Gibbons' finely judged decrescendo into the slow movement, with a time-stilling anticipatory final held note, she entered at a breathtaking hush.
After the passion of this treasured movement, her final restatement of the theme was immensely tender, then expansive before subsiding again into the preparation for the finale.
The thrilling four horns' climax of that Adagio will remain in the ears of many listeners, and the Scottish flavour of the Bruch finale was laid bare by the native of Ayr, who charmed all by taking her ovations, cheers and whistles while holding up her long skirt with one hand, her 1712 Earl Spencer Stradivarius in the other.
Deputy leader Rita French told me she felt Benedetti showed star quality in moving from morning rehearsal to high-octane afternoon performance and demonstrating her ability to create and interpret "in the moment" with real musicality, while remaining easy to follow for her accompanying orchestra.
Benedetti told me afterwards how her Japanese-devised classical technique, learned from the only classical teacher for miles around her part of Ayrshire, meant she would have to play her nation's reels and jigs differently to an itinerant Scottish fiddler.
Having had music in front of her for the performance, she explained: "I was playing the Bruch for the first time in a year and there were a couple of places I just needed to have it there in case. But I only have a problem with my memory playing the sonata repertoire. All the great concertos just flow."
Apologising for the programme change, Gibbons said he had never done it before in his 10 years here but sometimes adaptability was necessary when engaging international soloists.
The Rubbra work sounded unfaded by time and pleased the probable 99 per cent of the audience who had never heard it before. Gibbons has introduced another British stranger to his audience.
The Mendelssohn was a showcase for another of many recent occasions when the WSO has shown its finest colours. The whole orchestra covered itself in glory.
Famed music film maker Tony Palmer sold his latest DVD, O Thou Transcendent, about Vaughan Williams (the subject of Rubbra's Tribute) and donated the profits to Worthing Symphony Society.
The WSO's tympanist this time, Chris Blundell, is the tuned-percussion player with London Musici in accompanying Carnival of the Animals on the current Rambert Dance Company tour. See our Dance website pages for a review from their four days in Brighton. Blundell flies north on Tuesday for their Inverness performance.
The final WSO concert this season, "Effervescence" is on April 5, with Ian Fountain playing Brahms' second piano concerto and the WSO giving Smetana's Bartered Bride overture and Dvorak's Symphony No 8.
-------------------------------------
Click here for more classical music.
Click here to go back to leisure.
Where are you? Add your pin to the Herald's international readers' map by clicking here.
Email the Herald: letters@worthingherald.co.uk
Want to read this page in French, German, Spanish, Polish, Portuguese, Urdu or 48 other languages? click here for Google translate.
Looking for...
Featured advertisers
Jobs
Search for a job
Motors
Search for a car
Property
Search for a house
Weather for Worthing
Wednesday 30 May 2012
Today
Cloudy
Temperature: 12 C to 17 C
Wind Speed: 12 mph
Wind direction: South
Tomorrow
Sunny spells
Temperature: 12 C to 19 C
Wind Speed: 20 mph
Wind direction: South west

