Pittsburgh, PA

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pops opens season with fancy fiddlin'

Friday, October 17, 2003
By Jane Vranish, Staff Writer
MUSIC REVIEW

The Boston Pops
Marvin Hamlisch, conductor
At: Heinz Hall

Last night at Heinz Hall, Irish Fiddler Eileen Ivers bedazzled the Pittsburgh Symphony Pops audience at the opening concert of the season, one that put the spotlight front and center on the versatility of the violin.

Although conductor Marvin Hamlisch tries to keep a certain balance of power between the orchestral selections during the course of the year, it's virtually inevitable that the strings are called upon to hold long, luscious chords. This was the opportunity to "string" the audience along through light classics like "Holiday for Strings," "Strings on Fire" and the inspiration for the title of the program "Fiddle Faddle."

Jennifer Orchard was plucked from the second violin section, where she serves as assistant principal, to play a sizable part in the program. She offered a pair of solos, "Zigeunerweisen," a virtuoso warhorse that virtually picks apart the instrument with a mine field of harmonics and staggering leaps, and "La Vida Breve," a fiery gypsy number that matched her red gown.

Ivers then took over with a collection of Irish songs.

It was virtually all Ivers in the second half, low key with the offbeat accents in "Flowing Tide," immersed in the bittersweet lament of "Bygone Days," and the sweeping "Planxty Loftus Jones," before turning the mike over to vocalist Tommy McDonnell for "Reconciliation," a tranquil melody dedicated to Northern Ireland. Ivers then joined Orchard and concertmaster Mark Huggins in the finale from Chris Brubeck's "Interplay."

To cap it all, the relentless excitement of the "Blizzard Train" finale added four dancers from the Burke School of Irish Dancer and left Hamlisch literally reeling with delight.

The program will be repeated tonight and tomorrow at 8:00 PM and Sunday at 7:30 PM.