San Francisco Symphony at 100 Blu-ray Review
Happy Birthday.
Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, June 12, 2012
Forgive me if I indulge in some momentary civic pride, but San Francisco's downtown public library doesn't (or at least
didn't) have anything near the music score collection that Portland's main library does. I had lived in Portland
for a couple of years when I decided to move down to the City by the Bay to work in a couple of jazz clubs, but I was
also then manically studying classical scores and wanted to continue my learning curve. I dutifully managed to get a
San Francisco library card and went to the music section and was appalled to see an absolute dearth of available
material, at least
compared to Portland's really impressively large collection. That probably didn't have a lot to do with my ultimate
decision to move back to Portland, but I've often wondered how a city so full of musical life in so many different genres
could not have a greater collection of classic scores available to the general public. My sojourn in San Francisco was
filled with incredible music. I was barely 21 at the time, though I had already graduated from college over a year
previously, and I was able to rustle up some gigs in little clubs down off of Market and also a funky little joint up in
Haight Ashbury, but all of my free time was spent seeing a huge variety of other musicians, whether it be fantastic jazz
players downtown or modern ensembles made up of students at the San Francisco Conservatory. (I got in trouble a
couple of times dropping by the Conservatory and going into one of their practice rooms to "work out" on a piano—
something strictly forbidden if you weren't an actual paying customer-student, so to speak.) But being a poor,
struggling musician meant I simply didn't have the funds to ever attend a San Francisco Symphony concert, and that
has been one of my major regrets from that period of my life. The west coast civic symphony orchestras have never
seemed to really get their due in the grand scheme of things where Culture (with a capital C) is assumed to be an East
Coast phenomenon, though Gerard Schwarz has managed to raise the cachet of the Seattle Symphony
rather significantly, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic gets a little credit now and then simply due to the fact that L.A. is
such a cultural bulwark. The Oregon Symphony is usually an also ran, though former maestro James De Priest did good
work with it and current Music Director Carlos Kalmar gets respectful reviews. Perhaps surprisingly, the San Francisco
Symphony probably comes out on top of all of the west coast consortiums and it is in the midst of some gala
celebrations of its 100th anniversary. (Civic pride alert again: the Oregon Symphony—as well as the Seattle Symphony
—predate San Francisco's orchestra by several years.)
Part of the San Francisco Symphony's luster and ascendancy can be traced to its current Music Director, Michael Tilson
Thomas, who assumed the position in 1995. (Tilson Thomas was also Principal Guest Conductor of the Los Angeles
Philharmonic around a decade earlier.) Tilson Thomas has a natural ebullience which makes him perhaps more
accessible
than the crusty conductor of yore, and as I've mentioned before in other reviews of Tilson Thomas discs, there's little
doubt that Tilson Thomas is the heir apparent to the Leonard Bernstein tradition of combining nuanced interpretation
with
music education. Tilson Thomas' excellent
Keeping Score series (
Keeping Score: Shostakovich's
Symphony No. 5 Blu-ray review,
Keeping Score: Mahler Blu-ray review,
Keeping Score: Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique Blu-ray
review,
Keeping Score: Ives' Holidays Symphony Blu-ray review) follows in the tradition of Bernstein
efforts like the
Young People's Concerts or
The
Unanswered Question: Six Talks at Harvard. Tilson Thomas "instructs" mostly through music on this particular
outing,
which is hosted by author Amy Tan (
The Joy Luck Club).
This is a bit of an odd assortment of material, but it includes one iconic American composer, offers a showcase for guest
performer Itzhak Perlman, features a performance that of one of the most iconic "educational" compositions of all time,
and closes with an homage to another American composer whom Tilson Thomas has championed for years. The concert
opens with a splendid reading of Aaron Copland's Ballet Suite from
Billy the Kid, a familiar piece which offers lots
of little solo moments for a variety of the Symphony's stellar players. Perlman takes the stage next for the lyrical but
boisterous Mendelssohn
Violin Concerto in E Minor. Tilson Thomas displays his penchant for edifying his
audience with a brisk run through of Benjamin Britten's
Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, a piece that
probably introduced many classical music lovers to the various sections and sounds of a symphony orchestra. Bringing
up the rear, so to speak, is an energetic reading of a piece Tilson Thomas premiered several years ago, John Adams'
Short Ride in a Fast Machine. Adams is in attendance and takes a quick bow, and there's no mistaking the
genuine affection that exists between Tilson Thomas and the composer. Davies Symphony Hall is home to a kind of
light show for this performance, as some nice projections fill the billowing fabric hung above the audience, giving the
impression that the entire venue is hurtling through space.
Tan is on hand between some of these offerings to give little snippets of the orchestra's long and rather interesting
history. Tilson Thomas also takes the microphone for a few minutes to thank an appreciative audience for continuing to
support the Arts in San Francisco. Maybe he can do something about that score collection in the San Francisco library if
he has some free time.
Note: Those of you who like to read credits (like I do) and who have a long memory may get a laugh out of
something that flies by at the end of this concert. One of the video technicians is named William Steinberg. Some of you
may know that another (hopefully, anyway) William Steinberg was the longtime conductor of both the Pittsbugh and Boston Symphony
Orchestras, and
Tilson Thomas in fact made his conducting debut when Steinberg took ill and Tilson Thomas replaced him in Boston (shades of
Bernstein and Bruno Walter in New York).
San Francisco Symphony at 100 Blu-ray, Audio Quality
San Francisco Symphony at 100 features two Dolby TrueHD audio options, a 5.1 surround mix and a 2.0 stereo mix. The 5.1 mix is
gorgeously spacious and is especially fine in numbers that offer soloists playing against the orchestra, as in several moments of the
Billy the
Kid Suite and (of course) the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto and the Britten
Guide. Fidelity is top notch throughout both of these
mixes, with beautiful reproduction of all frequency ranges. The 5.1 also adds the exemplary hall ambience of the Davies venue. Dynamic range
is especially impressive across the course of the concert, varying from the bombastic
tuttis of the Adams onslaught to more delicate
shadings in the Copland piece.