The first of this season's 22 BSO Tanglewood concerts was performed Friday July 5, with the Tanglewood Festival Chorus on board and Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos conducting Mahler's Symphony No. 2, "Resurrection."
It was a perfect evening to sit still for a long time, the unbearable humidity of the previous 3 days abated, and sit still we did while the orchestra darted about the aural landscape, taking several right turns and maybe a few wrong ones, revving it up, idling down, before finally taking a back seat to John Oliver and his 120 voice chorus which brought down the checkered flag with a thrilling finale.
With the large chorus seated still above and behind the orchestra for nearly an hour it's hard not to be anticipating their performance, especially when the several orchestral movements fail to coalesce. There was plenty to like in each movement, and some exciting transitions, but only the promise of the vocal payoff kept us trying to concentrate throughout.
The season will close on August 25 with the BSO and Tanglewood Festival Chorus together again in another program with a big vocal finale, Sir Roger Norrington conducting Beethoven's Symphony No. 9, [get it @ amazon.com]. Beethoven's Ninth seems to be becoming the traditional Tanglewood closing program; it makes for a nice symmetry to open with something similar, like the Mahler, providing musician and audience alike opportunity to travel the breadth and depth of the aural spectrum, to whet the appetite for a summer-long feast here where music alights for a while each year.
And speaking of lighting, the Housatonic Philharmonic sparked up a spirited set of Celtic and American music in the tent overlooking Ozawa Hall, to cap off the special Tanglewood homecoming celebration which also featured Hickory Bill's Barbecue (not a band, real ribs and suchlike) and the David Mullaney Band from Ballina, Co. Mayo, which is Pittsfield's Irish sister city.
We arrived in time only to hear the swell-named local lads: Paul Rice: fiddle and guitar, Andy Gordon: banjo and spoons, and Tim Gray: piano, penny whistle and hammer dulcimer. Their set was a perfect sampler of their branch of roots music, ranging all the way back to the blind harpist and composer Turlough O'Carolan, revered as the last of the itinerant Irish bards (b. 1670) and up to the present, including Jay Ungar's Woodstock-area composition Ashokan Farewell, andtheir own Paul Rice's composition, Housatonic Hornpipe. (For booking info., e-mail: banjovi@joymail.com)