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Boston Symphony Orchestra Shines With Two Rising Stars
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12291 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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1 / 1987 |
1,280 Words |
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Richard Buell Richard Buell is a free-lance music critic residing in Boston. |
Why do symphony orchestras continue to exist in this day and age? One answer is that an orchestra fulfills a vague but nonetheless important civic function. It is generally believed that a city of a certain size has to have one. That civic function usually engenders, in practice, a sense of institutional routine expressed in an endless recycling of the same programs. Newness is variously tolerated - easily enough when there is an appearance by a soloist whose renown has come about through recordings but less so when the orchestra ceases to be a museum and something so daunting as a piece of contemporary music makes its way into the concert. When both forms of novelty appeared at some October concerts by the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Music Director Seiji Ozawa, one had the unnerving impression, for a good half of the time at least, that the institution was vibrantly alive. The reasons were two: composer Peter Lieberson and pianist Mitsuko Uchida.
Lieberson, who is now forty, was the youngest of twelve composers commissioned to write works in honor of the Boston Symphony's centennial in 1982. The resultant Piano Concerto, given its premier in April 1983 with the composer's childhood friend Peter Serkin as soloist, was well received. Conductor Seiji Ozawa was enthusiastic and, at a celebratory dinner following the final performance of the work at Symphony Hall, he prevailed upon Lieberson to write another orchestral piece - a short symphony. The concerto had been Lieberson's very first composition for full orchestra.
Though Lieberson took up music seriously only in his late teens, he grew up in a milieu that was saturated with music. His late father, Goddard Lieberson, was a stalwart of the recording industry and, as head of the
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