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Dual Triumph for ITZHAK PERLMAN
By
DAVID DOW BENTLEY III
“The
People’s Critic”
(Conroe COURIER
06.23.99)
It has been said that
at the time of his birth in Israel in 1945, Itzhak Perlman was “born
with a fiddle in his hand.” At the very least, we know by the age of three and
a half he was showing interest in the violin. Even a childhood bout with polio
that would leave his legs paralyzed did not prevent his beginning violin lessons
at the age of five. The rest, as they say, is history!
There is something almost amusing about finding one’s self in the
position of “evaluating” a
performance by one of the world’s finest musical geniuses. It is a good time
to remind myself of the answer I always give when people ask me how I chose my
column’s title, “The People’s
Critic.” At such times I try to explain that the premise of my column is
the notion that all kinds of “just plain folks” enjoy attending the wide
variety of performing arts. I always felt that this “silent majority” of
most audiences came away with very valid reactions and views about what they had
seen on stage. It was often my impression that these views were not well
represented by the intellectual elite that sometimes brings an excessively
negative approach to performing arts criticism. My goal is to hopefully do a
better job of speaking for “the man [or woman] in the street.” With that in
mind, I dared to enter the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion for last Saturday
night’s concert.
Perlman came to this country in 1958 at age 13 and gained popular
attention with a dazzling performance of the finale from Mendelssohn’s Flight
of the Bumble Bee on the Ed
Sullivan Show. He studied at Julliard, and then later at the Meadowmount
School for Strings where he met his wife to be, Toby Lynn Friedlander. They are
the parents of five children.
When Perlman first came on stage to join the orchestra, he made no
attempt to disguise his handicap as he entered through the usual side door and
made his way on crutches to the podium. It was a poignant moment, and the
audience knew it. They escorted him across the stage with warm applause which
was not at all a reflection of pity for this brilliant star, but rather a sign
of deep respect for both his talent and his courage in the face of his own
adversity. Perlman is noted as an
important spokesman for not only causes of the handicapped, but also for the
Jewish heritage of which he is very proud.
What had been a warm, sultry afternoon with leaden skies had suddenly
given way to a pleasantly cool and breezy Texas evening with such a dramatic
drop in humidity that it seemed the fates had smiled on performers and audience
alike. Audience member, Ruthellen Hinton remarked, “You couldn’t ask for a
better night.”
The program opened with Bach’s Violin
Concerto No.2 in E Major. The first movement began with a stately grace
and elegance that transported us back to the courtly days of its composition
circa 1720. The crisp precision of Perlman’s sensitive performance combined
beautifully with the superb ensemble work of the strings to create a rich river
of sound that embraced the audience on this sumptuous evening. The work was
frequently as gentle as the comforting breezes that circulated the theater. And
always, the musical accents and ornamentation lead us back to the star of the
evening with his literally bouncing enthusiasm.
The second movement is more somber and meditative. Here, the rich clarity
of Perlman’s instrument and performance are very much in evidence as the focus
shifts more to the soloist. We begin to see his additional skill as conductor as
he directs the orchestra during passages in which he, himself, is not playing.
The third movement opens with a vigorous return to the stately qualities
of the first. It was highlighted by still more of the conducting skill of the
maestro. Under his direction the piece is brought to a very satisfying
conclusion.
Next on the program was Beethoven’s Romance
in G Major for Violin and Orchestra, Opus 40.
Perlman gave the audience and orchestra a chuckle by
pretending to wring the perspiration out of his handkerchief. It seemed he had
discovered he was in Houston after all. Again intermittently conducting, Perlman
presides over the calm, ensemble skill of the orchestra. This serves as the
backdrop to his dazzling display of rich use of vibrato.
The participants are weaving a luxurious tapestry. The extraordinary
dexterity of Perlman’s fingering technique is clearly evident at the close of
this selection.
As the concert continued, Mr. Perlman seated himself on the podium to
conduct Schubert’s Overture to
Rosamunde. The piece opens momentarily full of suspense and intensity
and quickly recedes to softer melodic lines. It builds with bursts of mysterious
energy, subsides softly, and then takes off at a crisp gallop with rich passages
full of power and passion. The vast variety of the piece and the skill of the
musicians easily kept the audience’s attention while maestro Perlman presided
skillfully over the complexities of this conductor’s challenge. The powerful
finale seemed almost symbolic of the remarkable power of this gentle giant.
The concert concluded with Perlman conducting Brahms’ Symphony
# 4 in E Minor, Opus 98. The first movement began like the gentle
opening of a flower in slow motion. It is a work of vast contrasts, at once a
pulsing, pounding heartbeat, and just as suddenly drifting, as though to fade
away. Its vibrant and ever building power is peppered by strong brass accents
suggesting approaching royalty. It is a piece of great grandeur, beautifully
realized by both conductor and musicians.
The second movement opens
with a sweet calmness that seems to offer respite to musicians who gave so much
during the first movement. But again we see Brahms’ ever-building power as the
movement progresses. Mr. Perlman was well equipped to navigate his musicians
through the movement’s many subtle changes in direction.
The third movement opens so powerfully that it rings of a finale. It was
nicely punctuated by percussion, and featured dazzling string passages perfectly
executed under Perlman’s skilled baton.
The great passion of the fourth and final movement seemed, at times, to
border on frenzy. Flute and clarinet passages provided especially pleasing solo
moments. A crisp, intense and shimmering atmosphere began to overtake the stage
and audience, and at last the strong conducting arm of this virtuoso violinist
guided us to the work’s thrilling conclusion and the much deserved ovations
that followed.
The assembled began to drift happily toward their cars. Woodlands
residents, Joe and Emily Colgan, greatly enjoyed the concert, though Mrs. Colgan
regretted that Perlman never addressed the audience from the stage: “He is so
interesting to listen to!” As HSO
violinist, Deborah Moran left the stage, she remarked how “…very
gratifying…” it had been to work with such an “ …interesting conductor
and musician.” She also appreciated Perlman’s generous use of humor saying:
“He was always joking!”
Bentley’s columns, featured in newspapers
from the East Coast to the Gulf Coast, may be viewed on the website at
www.ThePeoplesCritic.com
while E-mail may be addressed to
ThePeoplesCritic@earthlink.net
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