RSNO, Denève; Ensemble Matheus, Spinosi, Royal Albert Hall | reviews, news & interviews
RSNO, Denève; Ensemble Matheus, Spinosi, Royal Albert Hall
RSNO, Denève; Ensemble Matheus, Spinosi, Royal Albert Hall
French sophistication meets Italianate fire in two stunning Proms
![](https://theartsdesk.com/sites/default/files/styles/mast_image_landscape/public/mastimages/unknown_0.png?itok=uccVXotu)
Is that asking a lot? Probably not, considering what's already been achieved at this year's BBC Proms. Looking back on it, last night felt implausibly rich yet gloriously digestible, too, at least in retrospect. I couldn't have predicted that I would be so swept away by the jam-packed wonders that came from Jean-Christophe Spinosi's Ensemble Matheus and their soloists.
Last night, all four glorious hours of it, began as it meant to end, with an Italian festival viewed through the eyes of the French. And here, right at the start of Berlioz's Roman Carnival Overture, was what I'd been missing in Rattle's first Berlin Prom (wish I'd been at the second, which sounds like it fitted his micromanagement better): not just the rainbow of dynamic effects - Denève managed that in the contrast between the opening flourish and the ensuing string susurrations - but the long vision too, in a cor anglais song (from Zoe Kitson, excellent throughout) which moved at a natural pace but never lost out on Berlioz's multiple details. Denève, like Robin Ticciati, knows how to lift an operatic phrase: that's why I'm so keen to hear him in Berlioz's Benvenuto Cellini, the composer's liveliest opera and the overture's parent work.
Brilliant sonorities in this tricky hall, reaching to my least favourite seat well to the rear of the amphitheatre's semicircle of stalls, seemed to have been tried and tested (you can see it's summing-up time in the last week of the Proms, as I mention the other conductor who seemed to have cracked the venue's difficulties, Donald Runnicles with the other big Scottish orchestra earlier in the season). With the more restricted palette of Beethoven's Fifth Piano Concerto, it was murkier business as usual for the orchestra, despite a splendid lift for the finale's leaping dance which outstripped the soloist; but otherwise Paul Lewis (pictured below right at the start of his Beethoven concertos marathon) had the lion's share of clarity and upper-register gleam.
![Prom_6_-_21](/sites/default/files/images/stories/Prom_6_-_21.jpg)
In their Prom of two years ago, Denève and the RSNO placed a recent Scots work third out of four, and so it was here with the three interludes from James MacMillan's shocking bloodgrudge operatic legend The Sacrifice, the only opera I've seen in the last decade which I could call a total masterpiece. Much of its sense of dread and imminent violence is quickly adumbrated in the interludes, especially the central Passacaglia for a wedding celebration that will end in tears. Yes, there are shades of Peter Grimes here, but MacMillan is master of his own distinctively dense orchestral palette and his underlying tension was vividly energised by Denève in music that - rare among contemporary works - knows exactly where it's going.
It was bold to move straight on to the dazzling, equally clearly etched light of Respighi's Villa Borghese in The Pines of Rome. It's a real Albert Hall showcase with the resounding orchestral chants of the catacomb sequence and the ultimate spatial effects of ancient Roman cohorts on the march, crowned by the mighty organ. But again, Denève made it more than that. The refinement of Respighi's Janiculum moonshine, ushered in by the utterly distinctive clarinet of veteran John Cushing, proved not Hollywoodish but Debussyan - worthy of the master of La Mer and even Jeux. And could you expect to hear a more exquisitely reproduced real nightingale? Only, he pretentiously adds, on a May night in the Abruzzi.
![Prom_70_-_76](/sites/default/files/images/stories/Prom_70_-_76.jpg)
As it happened, they ended up playing to the gender reversal, not least in the anything-you-can-do competition of the encore, "Nel profondo cieco" from Vivaldi's Orlando furioso, turned into a justifiably mugged bit of high-versus-low (had Canadian-born Lemieux been watching The Morecambe and Wise Show, and the lady who used to thank everyone for being on her little show?).
![Prom_70_-_172](/sites/default/files/images/stories/Prom_70_-_172.jpg)
All Proms photographs by Chris Christodoulou
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