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The Dartmouth
April 18, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
David Guerrerio
The Setonian
Arts

DSO presents impressive interpretation of classics

Under the baton of music director and conductor Anthony Princiotti, the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra presented an enjoyable rendition of three popular works from the standard orchestral repertoire to a full house. Saturday evening's concert began with an appropriately simple performance of the overture to Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro." The tone of the upper strings was clear, their touch was light and the performance was an energetic one. Perhaps too much so: Princiotti allowed the violin's momentum to take over, and by last section it had sped up considerably. The Violin Concerto in G Minor, by German composer Max Bruch, is among the more popular orchestral compositions for the instrument. Expressive melody takes precedence over virtuosic pyrotechnics, making the work both easily accessible for audiences and ideal material for young violinists. Patrick Kwon '96's performance of the violin solo was admirable in its technical precision. The rapid scales of the first movement were executed with agility and with mostly excellent intonation. The more lyrical second movement was equally skillful, and the finale's fiery gypsy character was handled with aplomb, though as with the Mozart, this enthusiasm caused an inappropriate accell-erando that the rest of the orchestra was not always prepared to follow. Throughout the course of the concerto, Kwon's technical mastery was beyond question. Even so, because the work's narrative is not one of technical accomplishment, but rather of lyric emotion, one wished he would have explored a more expressive realm of playing, especially in the use of greater dynamic contrasts to shape melodic lines. His level of playing is certainly high enough that he could afford the indulgence. The program concluded with Dvorak's Symphony No.

The Setonian
Arts

'Romeo and Juliet' to open tonight

"Romeo and Juliet" is undoubtedly the best-known of Shakespeare's plays. As with so many of Shakespeare's works, it has been reinterpreted in every age according to the prevailing tastes. The nineteenth century latched onto the ideal of romantic love presented in the young lovers' tale, immortalizing them in both opera and ballet. Through the twentieth century it has similarly inspired a plethora of films and even a musical. As such, it seems inevitable that the play be re-interpreted for the 1990s, this age of talk shows and e-mail, as a study of teen suicide. Special resonance will certainly be felt by members of the Dartmouth community, following so closely on the heels of the strange coincidence of three separate suicides which have been the source of much campus conversation and concern. One should not expect a true "updating" of the play, though.

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