Music and Dance Reviews : Pianist Pires in Debut With Chamber Orchestra
Saturday’s concert by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra under Iona Brown’s direction at Ambassador Auditorium was a loving tribute to familiar Mozart: the omnipresent Piano Concerto in C, K. 467, and the Symphony in E-flat, K. 543.
The absence of routine was assured by the presence in the concerto of a slight, 40ish Portuguese pianist named Maria Joao Pires, making a West Coast debut that carried with it an air of something quite special.
Pires is not a scholarly Mozartian. It was, in fact, startling to hear the piano’s unprepared entrance in the finale, without the runs that pianists today routinely interpolate to flesh out what can seem a rather blunt episode.
More important was the keen-edged intensity and solid, focused tone Pires brought to the score. This was playing which combined rhythmic thrust--notwithstanding judiciously applied rubatos, to keep the melodic line flexible--with rapt lyricism. Pires provided her own thoughtful cadenzas, beginning that in movement one with a striking quotation from Beethoven’s C-minor Piano Concerto. On its own, in the Mozart symphony, the LACO offered a taut, witty and finely detailed reading of a sort one is unlikely ever to hear from an orchestra that makes its living playing Brahms and Mahler.
And if anyone can doubt that Brown’s string-playing expertise and experience have not had a hugely positive effect on her charges, the confirming evidence was there in the airily delicate balance achieved by the strings in the symphony’s slow movement.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.