Review Boris Giltburg & Philharmonia, Royal Festival Hall, London by James Ellis 



 out of 5 stars (4 / 5)

Philharmonia are breaking out the party hats and having many slices of cake as they party their 80th year. With one of London’s leading orchestras, I would be hard stuck to think just how many of their gigs I’ve attended in the capitol and on tour. It was billed that Evgeny Kissin would be the soloist for this latest concert at the Southbank, in what would prove to be a blockbuster night of two pianos concertos and ballsy orchestra music all from Russia. 

A Night on the Bare Mountain (as named in the programme) is one of Mussorgsky’s finest and most well known orchestral pieces. Yet this arrangement by Rimsky-Korsakov is the only way I could ever listen to the work. Mussorgskys gradual decline into alcohol would leave much work in reduced piano form or incomplete at his death. Most famous for devilish outing in Disney’s Fantasia, this is highly regarded as a great Russian work, one that is is instantly recognisable. It’s thrill and total menace lie in its varying backstories and it often makes a fine concert opener.

With. No Kissin to be had, Boris Giltburg is another Russian offering which is pleasing to audiences and critics. I recall his Rachmaninov in Cardiff which went down a storm pre-pandemic. His jump off would be Prokofiev’s 3rd Piano Concerto as the first of two of the night. Whilst not a furious or experimental as the previous concerto, the third is still fun. The composer’s often harsh, stunning tone is here, Giltburg gets to play often sweeping melodies, as the orchestra was bouts of intrigue and delusion. I saw not the keys of the piano in the hall, yet seeing Giltburg often has the wow factor, the tenacity and tenderness are key elements to his craft. 

An all Rachmaninov second half saw The Rock as another orchestral spotlight. Not to be confused with his Isle of the Dead, this was standard fare, I would not say it gripped nor moved me in much of a way. This is early student days from him and it shows, the grandiose romantic adoration would come later in often deeply impactful ways. His 2nd Piano Concerto is known to British ears thanks to David Lean’s Brief Encounter, a classic that spans eras. With it’s heightened rhapsodic nature, mastery of pace, melody and emotional touch, its never boring. Giltburg really gets Rachmaninov, proven with many totalling, past performance. An unwavering presence on the piano, I doubt too many were irked Kissin was not playing tonight.  


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