Metamorphosis in Motion: Wiener Sinfonietta Redefines the Symphony
-- Alexander Hoffmann, Contributor The encore of the evening? A stunning arrangement of Strauss’s Metamorphosen for the Sinfonietta’s exact forces. Bring tissues.
The funeral march is rarely as devastating as it is here. The Wiener Sinfonietta strips away the 20th-century varnish. They play with lean, transparent textures. You hear the violas gasping for breath. You hear the bassoons wailing. By the time the horns announce the new theme in the finale, the "hero" has not just died—he has transformed into something entirely new.
You can see it in their faces. The oboist adjusts her reed mid-phrase to bend a pitch. The cellist leans into the gut string. This is not a polished, sterile recording. This is a fight for the music. If you believe the symphony is dead—that we are merely museum curators for Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven—the Wiener Sinfonietta will prove you wrong.
Enter the .
Under the baton of their fiery young music director, the ensemble has curated a program that treats the symphony as a living organism. The question they ask is simple yet radical: What happens to a symphony when it passes through the crucible of the 21st century? The current cycle features three pillars of the Viennese canon, but not as you know them.