After the final weeks of last season, chock-full of new and adventurous music; after conducting Mahler's extravagant Eighth Symphony at the Hollywood Bowl last month; and after Thursday night's surprisingly timely gala, Esa-Pekka Salonen has suddenly turned seemingly tame. The first program of the new Los Angeles Philharmonic season at Walt Disney Concert Hall on Saturday night consisted mostly of Debussy and Ravel hits. Next week will feature Russian crowd-pleasers: Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto and Stravinsky's "The Firebird."
This doesn't mean, however, that Salonen has begun checking out early in his 17th and last season as the orchestra's director. The Philharmonic will embark on an Asian tour this month, and promoters in Tokyo and other capitals in the Far East find a steady diet of the classics profitable. Still, one wonders whether a little something more of our time -- say, a small piece of Toru Takemitsu -- might not have been smuggled in amid Debussy's "La Mer" and Ravel's "Mother Goose" and "Bolero." Saturday's program opened, instead, with Falla's Three Dances from "El Amor Brujo" ("Love, the Magician"), which includes what could have been good encore material.
That said, a basic consumer rule of orchestral concerts applied: Buy tickets for any program an ensemble is about to tour. Saturday night was simply the Philharmonic at its best. Gorgeously colored music was, well, gorgeously colored, sounding fresh as a burbling spring, the morning dew or any other cliche you might select.
Salonen recorded "La Mer" -- three short character pieces meant to evoke the sea, which Debussy completed in 1905 -- with the Philharmonic in February 1996. The session was held on a Culver City soundstage, lest Debussy's translucent scoring turn to mush at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, then the orchestra's home. The sound is dry, concentrated. Salonen achieves great things rhythmically. A slightly chilly character serves Debussy's Modernist side better than his sensual one. The playing is virtuosic.
This was, at the time, perceived as a high standard. But a much higher one that could not have been imagined a dozen years ago was reached Saturday night. What was technically confident playing in the past has become emotionally confident. And Disney Hall, of course, provides a marked improvement in the sonic immediacy department.