Thanks to the Haifa Symphony Orchestra’s concert program one could gain awareness of what one does not always realize: Mendelssohn and Berlioz were contemporaries, even though Mendelssohn, in his
Violin Concerto, sounds conservative, subtle and listener-friendly, and Berlioz daring, dramatic and complexity-ridden, in his
Symphonie Fantastique. And the 20th century’s Sibelius seemed to be the most Romantic of them all in his
Finlandia.
Algerian-born Gilles Apap, the
Concerto’s soloist, started with an encore, to be on the safe side, even before the Concerto – a Bach
Sonata movement. This precaution proved unnecessary, however, because the enthusiastic audience later extracted three more Encores from him after the
Concerto as well. He displayed outstanding purity of intonation, incisive articulation, appealing lyrical songfulness in the slow movement, and
Midsummer Night’s Dream-like sparkle in the final one. But what aroused the audience’s excitement in particular was the folk-music-fiddling of his final encores, dashed off with dazzling virtuosity, high spirits and mischievous humor.
Not having heard this far northern orchestra for quite some time, one
was in for a veritable surprise in the well-rehearsed, firmly
consolidated rendition, rich and full sound, and remarkable
transparence under Noam Sheriff’s baton. As demanding a work as
Berlioz’s
Symphonie is, the Ball movement sounded dance-like flexible,
the March to the Scaffold plastically described Dr. Guillotine’s
ingenious, life-shortening invention, and the Witches’ Sabbath was just
as frightening as one could possibly wish.