Bournemouth Sympthony Orchestra at Portsmouth Guildhall REVIEW: 'Fresh, lively and scarily fast'

The best-known feature of the Guildhall, the Pompey crest, hung skew-whiff at the end of an astonishing concert given by the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra.
Pianist Andrei Korobeinikov was guest soloist at  Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra's Unrequited Love concertPianist Andrei Korobeinikov was guest soloist at  Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra's Unrequited Love concert
Pianist Andrei Korobeinikov was guest soloist at Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra's Unrequited Love concert

This was a dazzling show, more exciting than a trapeze act and louder than a 10-gun salute.

The concert theme, Unrequited Love, focused on composers who’d written passionate music after failed love affairs. The marriage between the people of Portsmouth and the BSO has already lasted over 70 years – a marriage to be nurtured.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Rachmaninov’s Rhapsody on a theme by Paganini can almost be played without music, it’s programmed so frequently. But this wasn’t the stale rendition which over-familiarity can produce.

It was fresh, lively and scarily fast, with the orchestra clearly loving working with stand-in conductor, Thierry Fischer.

Musicians quickly learn ‘save the best ‘til last’ and Berlioz and the BSO kept us waiting. First, swirling dances and pastoral scenes, then the fantastic climax to his Symphonie Fantastique.

Was it the battery of six timpani and an enormous bass drum which did for the city’s crest, or the phalanx of 14 brass players (the latter out-doing the blow of Storm Brendan)? But both sounds brought shouts of joy from an ecstatic audience.

Related topics:

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.