REVIEW: CARNEGIE HALL TURNS 125, WITH BRASS AND OTHER FANFARE
In the
foreground, from left, Itzhak Perlman, Emanuel Ax and Yo-Yo Ma performing at
Carnegie Hall’s 125th Anniversary Gala, for which Richard Gere served as the
host. CreditRichard Termine for The New York Times
Addressing a packed Carnegie
Hall on Thursday night,
Richard Gere, the evening’s host, welcomed everyone to the venerated hall’s
“125th-birthday party.” The night was indeed the exact anniversary of
Carnegie’s festive opening, May 5, 1891, at which Tchaikovsky, in his only
visit to America, conducted his
“Marche Solennelle,” and Walter Damrosch led the first New York performance of
Berlioz’s “Te Deum.” Thursday’s concert, as Mr. Gere suggested, was more a
celebratory musical affair than a substantive musical program. And why not?
James
Taylor performing at Carnegie Hall’s anniversary event. CreditRichard
Termine for The New York Times
Sure, Carnegie Hall might have
commissioned a work for the occasion, or performed something as ambitious as
that Berlioz piece: a 50-minute score for a tenor soloist, two choruses,
children’s choir and orchestra. But Carnegie has been a commissioning colossus
for decades and has presented hundreds of challenging programs. This was party
time. The celebrants were a cavalcade of popular artists, including Renée
Fleming, Isabel Leonard, Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, Lang Lang, Emanuel Ax, Michael Feinstein and James
Taylor.
In a gesture both fitting and
poignant, the Oratorio Society of New Yorkopened the program, with the dynamic conductor Pablo
Heras-Casadoleading the
Orchestra of St. Luke’s. The society was founded in 1873 by Leopold Damrosch
(Walter’s father). Andrew Carnegie became its president in 1888, and his
determination to secure a fine home for the choir, as well as the city’s
Symphony Society Orchestra, led to the building of Carnegie Hall.
Isabel
Leonard with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, conducted by Pablo Heras-Casado.CreditRichard
Termine for The New York Times
On Thursday, after a stirring
performance of the national anthem, fortified by brass players in the aisles
and balconies, Mr. Heras-Casado led the chorus and orchestra in a rousing
account of Handel’s “Zadok the Priest,” a coronation anthem. Turning to chamber
music, Mr. Perlman, Mr. Ma and Mr. Ax played the Andante from Mendelssohn’s
Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor. That these artists chose the tranquil, beguiling
slow movement from this Mendelssohn work, which they played beautifully,
brought a reflective moment to a gala evening. Then Mr. Ax and Mr. Lang, making
an unlikely piano duo, gave a sprightly account of Dvorak’s Slavonic Dance in G
minor for piano four-hands. Mr. Ma joined them for “The Swan” from
Saint-Saëns’s “The Carnival of the Animals.”
Mr. Lang had the piano to
himself for a milky Manuel Ponce intermezzo and one of Ernesto Lecuona’s feisty
“Danzas Afro-Cubanas.” Ms. Fleming sang Strauss’s song “Morgen,” accompanied by
Mr. Heras-Casado and the orchestra, with Mr. Perlman no less, playing the wafting
violin solo. She was joined by Ms. Leonard for a beloved duet, the “Barcarolle”
from Offenbach’s “The Tales of Hoffmann.” Later, microphone in hand, Ms.
Fleming slipped nicely into her pop mode for Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” with
the orchestra.
Lang Lang
performing at Carnegie Hall’s anniversary event. CreditRichard Termine for
The New York Times
After a sultry account of
Bizet’s “Habanera,” Ms. Leonard also proved herself a stylish singer of
American popular music, collaborating with Mr. Feinstein in a Berlin and Kern
medley of works made famous onscreen by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. It had
to be a little intimidating for Ms. Leonard and Mr. Feinstein to sing those
songs while photographs of Fred and Ginger in their glory were projected onto
the backstage wall.
There were touching spoken
tributes from two great singers, the mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne and the
soprano Martina Arroyo, who both have many decades of association with Carnegie
Hall. Then Mr. Taylor took the stage to play the guitar and sing George
Harrison’s “Here Comes the Sun,” joined by Mr. Ma, followed by two of his own
songs: “You and I Again” and “Shower the People,” in lush arrangements that
involved the chorus and orchestra.
The evening ended with
everyone onstage for a jam-session rendition of “The Joint Is Really Jumpin’ in Carnegie Hall.” Mr. Lang and Mr. Ax even took turns at the piano, playing
boogie-woogie riffs.
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