Skip to main content

Pacho Flores DAZZLES in Tucson

Pacho Flores, Corno
Music Director, José Luis Gomez
Tucson Symphony Orchestra

Friday night, 25 January 2019, Tucson Symphony Orchestra's 'Fresh Music, Copland and More' Classic concert:

ONE: this is a brilliant program. Two brass concerti, featuring Venezuelan super-virtuoso Pacho Flores, and two popular Aaron Copeland works, were bookended by sublime overtures by Mozart and Bernstein. ONE-A: a surprising common musical thread weaves its way through Mozart's Overture to 'The Abduction from the Seraglio', the 'Concerto for Corno da Caccia', by J.B.G. Neruda (a contemporary of Bach and Mozart), and the first movement of the new Arturo Márquez 'Concerto for Trumpet' – a sustained, repeated melodic syncopation. The TSO Music Director, José Luis Gomez, is a sly one!

TWO: this performance by Pacho Flores was a soulful and energetic gift to this audience. His tone, articulations, and musicality are masterly, while his virtuosity is both easy and mesmerizing. TWO-A: the Marquéz Concerto, written specifically for Pacho, covers a vast array of styles, and utilizes a different type of "corno" instrument for each movement. The finale, a virtuosic masterpiece, was given a BLISTERING, ear-opening performance by Pacho Flores – worth the price of admission alone. Even the (infamously sleepy) Tucson classical concert crowd was wowed to ovation. TWO-B: Señor Flores has a decidedly humorous side to his stage presence. To whit: solo brass performances always contain the necessary act of emptying the spit valves on the instrument. In the Neruda concerto, Pablo, large in physical stature, went through this routine with his miniature horn, emptying one valve, then holding the instrument above head level, to blow the saliva out of the second valve. Every player must engage in this chore, yet repeatedly executed, directly in front of the audience under spotlight, almost became a comic relief act during the beautifully and generously performed concerto. When, at the the end of the Marquéz concerto, and again after the accompanied encore, Pacho tooted a spoiler note towards his comrade in arms, José Luis, the complete picture of his honest, open, and lovable joviality was complete. Great musicianship and fun showmanship all around! As composer Marquéz, who was here for this premier, came to the stage, a heart-warming, congratulatory celebration ensued between these three Latin musical stars. What a treat for both audience and orchestra!

The second half opened -- accompanied by the orchestra playing Copeland's familiar 'Our Town' -- with a splendid photographic presentation, projected above the Music Hall stage, of the history of the TSO, now in its 90th year, and other events and places in this city's storied cultural history. A very moving experience for everyone in attendance. The second half feature, the ever-popular 'Four Selections From Rodeo' by Copeland, and especially Bernstein's virtuoso circus for orchestra, A.K.A. 'The Overture to Candide', were given, on this night, top notch execution and interpretation. These closing pieces, again, as we have come to expect, showed off the beautiful marriage of this orchestra and its Music Director. This is a fine, fun, and talented ensemble, whose love for its conductor is expressed in how well they respond to his exuberant, expressive direction. It is obvious, watching and listening, that this immense positive energy overflows in both directions. This longish program, was yet satisfying every joyful step of the way. Bravi, tutti!


HEAR IT: Humanity's Expressive Artists Reveal & Illuminate Truth

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

WE ARE ALL BROTHERS AND SISTERS!

Tucson Symphony Orchestra BEETHOVEN'S NINTH José Luis Gomez, conductor Maria Brea, soprano Kelley O’Connor, mezzo-soprano* Richard Trey Smagur, tenor Kelly Markgraf, baritone Tucson Symphony Orchestra Chorus · Marcela Molina, interim director PROGRAM Richard Wagner: Prelude to The Mastersingers of Nuremberg Richard Wagner: Wesendonck Lieder* Ludwig van Beethoven: Symphony No. 9, “Choral” Friday, 20 January 2023 ________________________ Prologue - Regarding Beethoven After life's most difficult questions and challenges have been asked and directly confronted, we all come together in a blissful bond of global fellowship, the grace of our open embrace of the entire knowable universe, beyond which a loving father–Nature's Creator!–must lie. Rejoice!! The rapturous evocation and celebration of universal brotherhood, described by Friedrich Schiller and delivered by Beethoven, is an overpowering, cathartic answer and conclusion to the massive tumult which was the social, economi

ANNE AKIKO MEYERS CONQUERS TUCSON -- Also Sprach Maestro José Luis Gomez

FIRST HALF ONLY Concert Review: F riday, 21 September 2018 in Tucson, was a night for the violinistas ! Consummate concert violinist Anne Akiko Meyers gave a deeply musical, masterly Beethoven performance to kick off the Tucson Symphony Orchestra's 90th Season. Then, celebrating the semicentennial of Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey', the TSO delivered an exciting, dramatic, and colorful performance of Richard Strauss's penetrating and profound tone poem 'Also Sprach Zarathustra', featuring talented Concertmaster Loren Roth and Associate Concertmaster Michelle Abraham . Finally, pressed hard by the audience for an encore, Maestro Jose Luis Gomez and orchestra waltzed us into a gloriously uplifting azure bliss to conclude this spellbinding odyssey. A nne Akiko Meyers' stage presence is striking , spirited, sensuous, and engaging. On this night, it was as if a beautiful, over-sized, super-musically-talented red flower blossom just happen