City Guide to Edinburgh, Scotland

City Guide to Edinburgh, Scotland

Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, Usher Hall, Review


By Barnaby Miln - Posted on 06 October 2011

4
Yuri Simonov
Show Details
Venue: 
The Usher Hall
Company: 
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra
Production: 
Prokofiev, Romeo and Juliet (short suite); Tchaikovsky, Violin Concerto; Mussorgsky, Pictures at an Exhibition.
Performers: 
Yuri Simonov (conductor), Nikita Boriso-Glebsky (violin)
Running time: 
140mins

This concert was pure Russian. The Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra playing Prokofiev, Tchaikovsky and Mussorgsky. No doubt this is why there was such a full audience.

Unusually for the Usher Hall, the Orchestra made a very orderly entrance to the stage moments before the highly decorated Yuri Simonov, their conductor since 1998. As they started to play some excerpts from Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet he at first appeared very regimental as he took full control of his players. But a gentler side started to emerge and by the end of the concert he was thoroughly enjoying himself demonstrating that he might be 70 this year but remains remarkably sprightly.

Wearing formal white tie and tails, Yuri Simonov brought out a small watch from his waistcoat, almost in a Charlie Chaplin manner, to see if there was time for an encore or two.  Naturally those too were Russian - he told us, in English, that they from Glazunov’s ballet Raymonda.

The soloist for Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto was Nikita Boriso-Glebsky who was in born in Southern Russia in 1985. His career took great leaps forward in 2010 when he won two prestigious international violin competitions. He certainly knew what he was doing with us, and the audience adored it. It is always a bit tricky when applause comes in between movements, but it was heartfelt.

After the interval we heard Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition. Originally written as a suite for piano it was arranged for orchestra by Ravel forty years after Mussorgsky’s death.

It will be easy to remember this visit by the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra because of their very real professionalism, not just by the way they came on stage but by their deportment and lack of fidgeting and clear devotion to the job on hand. By the end the audience was on its feet with well deserved applause.

Event: Wednesday 5 October 2011 7.30 pm

I agree with Barnaby and Andy Nicholl - it was a superb concert and one was very impressed by the sheer professionalism and excellence of the orchestra.   I would have give it more than the four stars, but I know Barnaby sets exceptionally high standards!     The great thing is that we have the St Petersburg Philharmonic to look forward to on 29th March 2012!   I anticipate another wonderful evening.

It was very difficult not to applaud after that wonderful 1st movement of the Tchaikovsky violin concerto - and Nikita almost seemed to be expecting applause - he certainly wasn't put off by it.

So - what was the piece which you didn't mention, Barnaby - Nikita's encore? 

Also, you didn't mention the unfortunate percussionist whose chair slid backwards off the staging during the quiet section of the Prokofiev...  I think the Usher Hall management could perhaps have given them a bit more space up there.

But altogether a brilliant concert rating more than the 4 stars you gave it.

Nikita's encore was sonata No. 3 from Eugène Ysaÿe's Six sonatas for solo violin, Op. 27

and I agree, that concert was worth more than 4 stars!