Saturday 30 January 2010

Scanning the skies

I've been looking at the heavens and checking the five day forecast more than usual recently. And the reason for this unusual meteorological interest? Well, it's just that tomorrow - Sunday 31 January - we could well have our first sell-out concert in the time that I've been working on Nottingham Classics. A momentous occasion, particularly given that it's Mahler's massive 2nd Symphony, but one that could - my pessimistic side keeps telling me - be hampered by the arrival of snow. Heaven knows we ought to have had our quota this January but cast your mind back a year and you may remember the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra concert being afflicted by a sudden, though brief, blizzard.

The effect was to dissuade quite a few people from making the trip to the Royal Concert Hall, meaning that they missed out on Andrew Litton's' fabulous interpretation of Walton's 1st Symphony. I know that quite a few of our Newark and Lincoln regulars didn't make it here which, I'm sure, was a big disappointment to them, and I can't help worrying (or at least my over-anxious alter ego does) that something might happen to rain (or rather) snow on our parade.

And all the more disappointing it would be given that this is the biggest audience that Mahler's had in Nottingham for many a year - well before I came to live here, I'd imagine. And I'd certainly not predicted such a high level of interest. To be honest I'd actually earmarked the CBSO on 4 February as our star performer and yet, very well though it's doing, it's certainly not going to overhaul the Mahler. It just goes to show that you just can't predict how your audience is going to react to a particular programme. I started to wonder whether the presence of Shostakovich in the CBSO's all-Russian programme might be the factor that prevents the CBSO from topping 2000 attenders. Until this year, Shostakovich tended to attract very similar audiences to Mahler - a sign that he's very popular in a certain constituent of attenders but a bit scary for more traditional tastes. Maybe it's the intensity of his sound-world, or at least a perception that he's a tad forceful. What do you reckon?

Whatever the reason, it seems that some of our regulars are going to miss Andris Nelsons this year - a great shame because he's certainly the most exciting conductor I've seen in many years - and he's still only 31. The CBSO must find it hard not to smile to themselves every day, knowing that they pipped several other orchestras when they signed him up.

I'll leave it up to you to decide whether he's Latvia's most exciting export this century. I need to wind this up because it's Saturday and I'd like to get out of the RCH office, where I'm catching up on a few things caused by somehow scheduling the busiest two weeks for live classical msuic here in a very long while. The most unusual of these is the Pianothon, a completely new venture, which was sparked by one of my City Council colleagues, Sharon Scaniglia, who wanted some live music as part of Light Night on 12 February. We're always keen to try something a bit out of the ordinary but this one really is a bit different, with ten pianists (of all types, not all classical, in fact) taking it in turns to play the Concert Hall's Bosendorfer from 6pm till midnight. Who knows how it'll turn out? But there are some very special talents taking part so it'll definitely be worth you dropping in to hear some of them, particularly given that it's free. You can find out more by visiting www.nottinghamclassics.org.uk/pianothon, where there's a schedule, a list fo programmes and short biogs of each performer.

That's it from me. One more task and then I'm off home - probably to check the weather forecast again.

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