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Ovations Reward Cortese-Led SR Symphony
Conductor among music director
candidates
by Diane Peterson
The Press Democrat, October 17, 2005
SANTA ROSAöThe
Santa Rosa Symphony soared into its 78th
season Saturday night under guest
conductor
Federico Cortese with grace and
ease, capping off the evening with a
searing performance of Dvorak's Symphony
No. 8.
It's difficult to lead an orchestra that
hasn't played together for five months,
especially when you're the new guy in
town.
But the cool-headed Cortese, who is the
third of seven candidates trying out for
the music director post, elicited both
precision and passion from the ensemble
during the sun-dappled Dvorak work.
There is nothing flashy or over-the-top
about Cortese's conducting.
He emanates good, solid musicianship
that speaks as simply and directly as
the folksy melodies Dvorak wove into his
irresistible eighth symphony.
Dvorak's open-hearted ode to his Czech
heritage evokes all there is to love in
an orchestra, from the pulse of the
timpani to the plaintive cry of an
English horn. And there was a lot to
love Saturday night.
The orchestra polished the Dvorak to a
high luster, responding to Cortese's
unbuttoned approach with lush string
tone, eloquent woodwind solos and
piercing brass fanfares.
The work received a standing ovation, as
did Tchaikovsky's "Variations on a
Rococo Theme" performed before
intermission by the young cellist Hai-Ye
Ni.
This de facto cello concerto, based on a
neoclassical theme spun off into seven
virtuoso variations, was performed with
unerring pitch and solid technique by
the impressive soloist. But it was her
phrasing - the singing, overarching
shape she gave each melodic line - that
elevated this work beyond a mere show of
virtuosity.
The evening opened with Haydn's Symphony
No. 94, "Surprise," the most popular of
the composer's 104 symphonies in its own
time.
Despite crisp cues and cut-offs from
Cortese, the reduced orchestra seemed to
have difficulty projecting a solid sound
in the deceptively simple work. With
repeated performances, this problem will
probably iron itself out. Still, the
"surprise" here was that the orchestra
had to struggle so hard to make a case
for a Haydn symphony.
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