Prom 39: BBCSO/Oramo review – a soaring tale of three cities … and a blackbird

Royal Albert Hall, London
Oramo’s Prom of English music included the UK premiere of Turnage’s Time Flies; with an encore of Paul McCartney’s Blackbird from tubist Constantin Hartwig

Sakari Oramo’s Prom of English music with the BBC Symphony Orchestra opened with the overdue UK premiere of Mark-Anthony Turnage’s Time Flies. A co-commission by the BBC, the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra, and Hamburg’s NDR Elbphilharmonie, it was written in 2019 as a celebratory piece for the Tokyo Olympics the following year, though its planned multiple premieres were all initially shelved due to Covid and subsequent travel restrictions. The first performance finally took place in Hamburg last year. Tokyo, for which the world premiere was originally intended, has still yet to hear it.

A large-scale piece lasting 25 minutes or so, it’s essentially a depiction of the three cities that commissioned it: structurally it flanks a slow central movement (Hamburg) with two contrasting allegros (London, Tokyo), each effectively dictated by its own pulse and individual time pattern. London is all about rhythmic disorientation as Turnage rings syncopated changes on a horn phrase that suggests a peal of church bells, though a lyrical soprano saxophone solo over undulating strings at the movement’s centre suggests the calm, steady flow of the Thames through the at times gleeful surrounding chaos.

Olympic Tokyo, meanwhile, is even faster, more frenetic, harder edged – a city in a party mood, its jazzy edginess and ritzy percussive chatter never letting up. In Hamburg, by contrast, the pressures of time are less. Harmonies progress more gently, as fanfares reminiscent of Copland alternate with complex but luminous woodwind and string passages, often of remarkable beauty. The virtuosity of Turnage’s scoring was matched throughout by the precision and brilliance of the BBCSO’s playing.

Its companion pieces were Vaughan Williams’s Tuba Concerto and Elgar’s First Symphony. Constantin Hartwig, tall, lanky and debonair, was the witty, if wonderfully refined soloist in the concerto and offered an arrangement of Paul McCartney’s Blackbird as an encore while outside the hot weather began to break and rain drummed loudly on the Albert Hall roof. Oramo, meanwhile, has long been an exceptional Elgar interpreter, and his performance of the First was by turns noble and volatile, deeply touching in the heartfelt adagio, and genuinely exultant at the end. Extremely fine.

  • Available on BBC Sounds until 14 August next year. The BBC Proms continue until 10 September.

Contributor

Tim Ashley

The GuardianTramp

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