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Siete qui: Home Press Archivio Rassegna Stampa Rassegna Stampa 2008 An archipelago of sweet sounds - Financial Times (UK) - 2/9/08
An archipelago of sweet sounds - Financial Times (UK) - 2/9/08 PDF Stampa E-mail

Testata: Financial Times (Gran Bretagna)
Martedì 2/9/08

FT.com
Lunedì 1/9/08


The most arresting sight on approachin the Italian village of Stresa by train, apart from the sheer beauty of Lake Maggiore and the mountains beyond, is that of the small islands whose separation from the mainland did not prevent development. It looks as if they could sink from the weight of their buildings, but those buildings have been there for centuries, a legacy of the Borromeo family of Milan, which gained control of Stresa centuries ago and is still around today.
One way to get a close-up look at them is to visit the Stresa Festival, which numbers among its performing venues Borromeo villas on two of the islands. With its old-world lakeside hotels ... Stresa proved and ideal spot for a summer festival in the early 1960s and attracted a socially prominent audience.  The festival ... has been rejuvenated by the conductor Gianandrea oseda, now in his eighth season as artistic director.
since coming to Stresa, Nosea ha become chief conductor of the BBC Philharmonic and music director of the Teatro REgio in Turin, and has  ample opportunity to invite world-class musicians to his festival, which offers a concert every evening for two weeks.
My first involved a boat trip to Isola Madre, where an arresting programme by the Zehetmair Quartet was scheduled outside a Borromeo villa. Alas, the cellist was ill, but the revised programme included a solo violin sonata by Grazyna Bacewicz, a winnig mix of modern sonorities and old-style virtuosity brilliantly played by Kuba Jacowicz...
A concert in a 13th-century church by the choir of King's College, Cambridge, conducted by Stewphen Cleobury, found the esteemed men an boys on especially fine form in music by 16th-century masters such as Thomas Weelkes and Orlando Gibbons. With an organ supporting the vocal lines in accordance with current musicological Thinking, Cleobury ensured that moments of red-blooded passion emerged.
Visiting orchestras, this year including the Philharmonia of La Scala and the Royal Philharmonic, are part of the Stresa experience but Noseda ... has formed his own hand-picked orchestra, drawn mainly from Italy, which he has led in semi-staged versions of Mozart operas. This year the 65 players took on Mahler's Symphony No.4, their largest-scale work yet, and if the numbers - 10 first violins, four double basses - are smaller than usual, they beautifully captured the symphony's Haydnesque attributes and, given the fire Noseda can impartbto a performance, never short-changed the symphony's more eruptive moments. Noseda beautifully caught the Viennese ebb and flow of tempo in the first movement, and the last movement, a setting of a poem from Des Knaben Wunderhorn, benefited mightily from the soprano Sally Matthews's textually oriented, lustrously voiced singing.
In a seething account of the Stravinsky Violin Concerto in which soloist Thomas Zehetmair pierced the work's neoclassical trappings to emphasise its kinship to the diabolical L'histoire du soldat. It was an ideal prelude to the semi-staged performance of the The Rake's Progress, with Matthews and Andrew Kennedy, scheduled the following evening, which unfortunately I had to miss.
Despite his activity elewhere, Noseda seems committed to Stresa... He has instituted a biennal composition competition, and there is talk of redoing the prosaic Palazzo dei Congressi or building a completely new hall. Stresa looks in good shape as it approaches its 50th festival in 2011.

George Loomis