- Details
-
Parent Category: Film and the Arts
-
Category: Reviews
-
Created on Monday, 27 December 2010 05:00
-
Last Updated on Monday, 24 January 2011 06:05
-
Published on Monday, 24 January 2011 05:57
-
Written by Jack Angstreich
On December 24th, 2010, Carnegie Hall continued a more than 40-year-old tradition by presenting the New York String Orchestra (young musicians in training) on Christmas Eve. Performing under the able direction of Jaime Laredo, this first of two holiday concerts at Carnegie Hall, although not quite up to the level of recent concerts by, say, the Juilliard Orchestra or the Mannes Orchestra, was an enjoyable, short program, lasting about an hour, with no intermission.
It opened with a charming account of Mozart's sparkling, perennially popular Overture to his operatic masterpiece, Cosi fan tutte.
The celebrated soloists, Jennifer Koh and Benjamin Hochman, took the stage to perform Felix Mendelssohn's appealing if slight Concerto for Violin, Piano, and Strings in D Minor, written when the composer was fourteen. The likable rendition here held its own against that of the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra with Joshua Bell and Jeremy Denk heard in New York last summer.
Mozart's magnificent "Paris" Symphony provided a compelling, if unexceptionable, close to this buoyant evening.
New York String Orchestra
December 24, 2010
Carnegie Hall
881 7th Avenue
New York, NY 10019
212-247-7800