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Los Angeles, October 1996
Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic
The Los Angeles Philharmonic recently performed excerpts from four
Herrmann scores, at a Tribute to the Movies concert fundraiser. Among
those in attendance were Elmer Bernstein and John Williams, both of whom were
also represented on the program (Bernstein with
The Magnificent Seven,
a rousing program opener, Williams with
E.T. - the flying music).
Excerpts from
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956),
Psycho, Marnie and Vertigo completed
the first half of the evening; the second half was a performance of the
Phil's current showpiece,
The Rite of Spring
(billed, amusingly enough, as
music from Fantasia in print ads!).
The main title for
The Man Who Knew Too Much
was impressive, if brief, the
Philharmonic making the most of its powerful percussion parts. The
Marnie
suite - as arranged by Herrmann for his 1968 album - was presented in its
entirety. The final third of the piece suffered from apparent
under-rehearsal, but the main theme was rapturously performed, and the "hunt"
sequence was also well played. The opening bars of
Vertigo
elicited murmurs
of pleased recognition among the audience. Salonen's tempo was not as brisk
as it is on his new CD - more reflective of the film. The abbreviated
performance of Herrmann's 1968 suite included the main title, nightmare, and
love theme. Suffering most from truncation was the
Psycho excerpt; rather
than play the entire
Narrative for Orchestra,
Salonen and orchestra presented
merely the main title (prelude) and shower scene. One could scarcely blame
the audience titters that accompanied the latter; robbed of any musical
context, the shower music is reduced to a mere "pop-culture" reference when
performed by itself.
It illustrated the chief drawback to the evening, and to many film music
concerts: the reduction of the scores to film-association gimmickry, rather
than a performance of an independent musical work. Herrmann's concert
arrangements of the scores attempted to create appropriate arrangements for
concert performance; it's a pity that even these brief suites were chopped
even further, and that the concert had no apparent logic to its selection
(E.T. next to Psycho?
- the preponderence of "dark" Herrmann scores made the
brief excerpt of Williams music sound incongruous).
Nevertheless,it was satisfying to see an organization of the
Philharmonic's stature acknowledge the importance of Herrmann's work -
particularly in light of that symphony's pointed rejection of Herrmann, as
either composer or conductor, during his 20-year residence in the city.
Reportedly, future creative teamings of the Philharmonic and film composers -
like Bernstein and Jerry Goldsmith - are being planned.
Copyright © 1996 by Steven C. Smith.
All rights reserved.
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