Atlanta Symphony Orchestra dazzles in opener of 80th season

This is a much different ASO than it was in 2017.

Jon Ross
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Atlanta Symphony Orchestra dazzles in opener of 80th season
Atlanta Music
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This is a much different ASO than it was in 2017. According to the organization, 15% of the orchestra’s musicians have joined during Stutzmann’s two full seasons at the helm; among the six new hires this season is Cameron Bonner as principal bassoon, replacing Andrew Brady, who is now with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, and Andrew Burhans as principal horn, who joins an utterly transformed horn section.

For the concert, Stutzmann nestled the cello section next to the violas, surrounding them on both sides with violins. This gave the cellos more presence in both the Schumann and the Mahler, with basses arrayed on risers behind the enlarged orchestra during the latter. Trying to find the right seating chart — musicians on risers, different instrument mixes within the ensemble — is an ongoing project for Stutzmann, but it’s an exercise that has served the orchestra well in a hall that is far from an acoustic marvel.

Principal guest conductor Donald Runnicles used Mahler’s Symphony No. 5 as his farewell to ASO patrons in 2023; he memorably brought the conductor’s first symphony to the orchestra the season before. Mahler’s voice seems to be equally important for Stutzmann. (She is leading the ASO and mezzo-soprano Fleur Barron in Mahler’s “Des Knaben Wunderhorn” next week.) Her post-intermission interpretation of Mahler on Thursday began with quiet, mysterious harmonies and crackled with energy during the second movement, a bright and busy folk dance. Gracefully bouncing at the podium while raising a balletic arm, she willed the orchestra to twirl along through the dance sections. From there to the heraldic horn choir in the closing passages of the fourth movement, the ASO sounded like it could contend with the best orchestras around today.

I can’t recall much of anything about the first time I heard the ASO in Symphony Hall (could it have been Runnicles standing at the podium?), but hearing the orchestra in its first live performance after COVID-19 is etched in my mind. The thrill of hearing old music teeming with life in a suddenly vibrant venue resurfaced during Mahler’s symphony. I hope that feeling returns many times during the orchestra’s 80th year.

Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

October 10, 2024

Story attribution: Jon Ross
Atlanta Music

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