All These Lighted Things / Elim Chan, Antwerp Symphony

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Anyone who has seen the conductor Elim Chan on stage is familiar with the immense energy produced by her baton. With the Antwerp Symphony Orchestra,...

Anyone who has seen the conductor Elim Chan on stage is familiar with the immense energy produced by her baton. With the Antwerp Symphony Orchestra, of which she has been Principal Conductor since 2019, she celebrates a genre dear to her heart, ballet music, which places the emphasis on both physical movement and orchestral power. More than a century of ballet music is presented here, with excerpts from Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet suites, oscillating between passionate love and fatal violence; Suite no.2 from Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé, the fruit of his first collaboration with Diaghilev in 1912, which he described as a ‘choreographic symphony’; and finally a work by Elizabeth Ogonek, All These Lighted Things, premiered in 2017. Although the title of these ‘three little dances for orchestra’ comes from a poem that evokes a soothing union with the earth at the dawn of a sunny day, the piece ends with a sort of folk dance that degenerates into an orchestral storm.

REVIEWS:

Conductor Elim Chan’s remarkable ear for detail is the star of All These Lighted Things, her new, dance-themed album with the Antwerp Symphony Orchestra.

Its title comes from a short set of pieces by Elizabeth Ogonek, who wrote them in 2017 for Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Highly abstracted though Ogonek’s approach to dance forms here may be, All These Lighted Things’ three movements are highlighted by a constant sense of invention and blazing colors. Particularly striking are the languid textures of the murky middle one.

The Suite No. 2 from Maurice Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé channels a similar sound world. Though Chan’s approach to the “Danse générale” reads a shade restrained, there’s no denying the clarity or warmth of the Antwerp ensemble’s performance. Indeed, “Lever du jour” is sumptuous and beautifully directed while the “Pantomime’s” flute solos sound fresh and improvisatory.

But it’s in Chan’s compilation of movements from the first two suites from Sergei Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet that her virtuosity as a conductor shines the brightest. A host of subtleties emerge, from the quietly suspended woodwind tones in “The Montagues and Capulets” to the marshmallowy textures in the middle of “Friar Laurence,” the burbling accompaniments and pattering flute figures in the “Balcony Scene,” and the luminous play of light and shadow during “Romeo and Juliet Before Parting.”

Taken with their judicious tempos and strong feeling for the music’s narrative character, Chan and the Antwerp SO provide a performance of this favorite that is revelatory in all the right and needed ways. Keep an eye on this pairing: they’re worth watching.

-- The Arts Fuse



Product Description:


  • Release Date: April 26, 2024


  • UPC: 3701624510384


  • Catalog Number: ALPHA1038


  • Label: Alpha


  • Number of Discs: 1


  • Period: 20th Century, Contemporary


  • Composer: Elizabeth Ogonek, Sergei Prokofiev, Maurice Ravel


  • Conductor: Elim Chan


  • Orchestra/Ensemble: Antwerp Symphony Orchestra


  • Performer: Elim Chan



Works:


  1. Romeo and Juliet Suite No. 1, Op. 64bis

    Composer: Sergei Prokofiev

    Ensemble: Antwerp Symphony Orchestra

    Conductor: Elim Chan


  2. Romeo and Juliet Suite No. 2, Op. 64ter

    Composer: Sergei Prokofiev

    Ensemble: Antwerp Symphony Orchestra

    Conductor: Elim Chan


  3. All These Lighted Things

    Composer: Elizabeth Ogonek

    Ensemble: Antwerp Symphony Orchestra

    Conductor: Elim Chan


  4. Composer: Maurice Ravel

    Ensemble: Antwerp Symphony Orchestra

    Conductor: Elim Chan