CONCERT REVIEW:
Houston Symphony
July 20, 2024
Miller Outdoor Theatre
Houston, Texas – USA
Houston Symphony, Dionysis Grammenos, conductor; Charles Seo, cello.
Samuel COLERIDGE-TAYLOR: Ballade in A minor, Op.33
Joseph HAYDN: Cello Concerto No.1 in C major, Hob.VIIb
Antonín DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 8 in G major, Op.88, B.163

Lawrence Wheeler | 22 JUL 2024
The Houston Symphony completed a five-concert series at Miller Outdoor Theatre Saturday evening. Beginning with their annual July 4 “Star-Spangled Salute,” the series continued unabated on July 12 after Hurricane Beryl struck the Houston area on July 8.
Many took advantage of the temperate weather this evening and sat on the hill overlooking the stage. Those in the covered seating area had air circulated by two huge fans. In its 83rd year, the annual tradition provides free concerts to Houston audiences.

Making his Houston Symphony debut, guest Greek conductor Dionysus Grammenos led works by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Antonín Dvořák. He was joined by Houston Symphony cellist Charles Seo in Joseph Haydn’s Cello Concerto in C major.
Coleridge-Taylor was only 23 when he was commissioned to write a work for an important British festival in 1898, the same year he wrote his highly popular Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast. The Ballade in A minor alternates energetic rhythmic figures with lyrical sections in a balletic narrative style. Sounding less developed than some of his more mature works, it offered bouncy and pretty elements but limited emotional depth. Conductor Grammenos led in a like manner, with little beat distinction between the rhythmic and the lyrical. Fluid but circular conducting motions offered little in the way of dynamics or phrasing direction, which were provided in large measure by the orchestra musicians themselves.
Charles Seo, a member of the excellent Houston Symphony cello section, presented Haydn’s C-Major Concerto. Discovered in 1961, the concerto has become a mainstay of cello repertoire.
Maintaining concentration through numerous sonic distractions (barking dogs, chirping birds, planes, medical helicopters, and people who think they are watching a movie), Seo played with self-assurance and consummate skill. Seo’s artistically-nuanced phrasing was not uniformly matched by Grammenos. The first movement’s cadenza (where the cello plays alone) was brilliant and flawlessly executed.

The second movement is the heart of the concerto, and Seo played it with heart, transporting the listener beyond the temporal. His warm and silky tone was compelling. By varying his vibrato and bow pressure, Seo provided a narrative of beauty.
The “Allegro molto” third movement was alertly conducted by Grammenos and virtuosically played by both orchestra and soloist. Seo again provided an outstanding cadenza with accurate double stops and leaps.
Given the enthusiastic audience response, he played an impromptu encore, “Nearer My God to Thee,” dedicated to his recently passed grandfather. This moving tribute was an unexpected treasure. It is impressive when a cellist of this caliber emerges from the section.
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