A lovely performance of my concerto by Wellington Youth Orchestra, with Louis van der Mespel on solo double bass, Hamish McKeich conducting. These players put so much conviction and honesty into their performance, and really do the piece justice.
Here's a nice review the orchestra got from Peter Mechen of Middle C Classical Music Reviews:
"Of course, present-day composition assumes an enormous stylistic and aesthetic range of expression, as the evening's first concert item illustrated. This was Thomas Goss's delightful Double Bass Concerto, written in 2004 and premiered the following year in Santa Rosa, California. It was played here brilliantly by Louis van der Mespel, his performance marking the young soloist's success in winning the WYO Concerto competition earlier this year.
"This work was intended by the composer as a kind of showpiece for the instrument, making use of its "natural" characteristics such as warmth, depth, resonance and available range of pitch and dynamics. In his program note Goss talks about the instrument's "alternate view of virtuoso string playing" -- and van der Mespel's performance realized these unique characteristics with considerable aplomb.
"I found the music had a kind of "English pastoral" feeling, predominantly lyrical and rhapsodic, a style assumed by the double-bass as well, with a few startling extensions to what one would expect from something like a viola or 'cello! Particularly striking was the instrument's high register under this young soloist's fingers -- his playing may have had the odd patch of edgy intonation, but such were few and far between.
"Goss's writing for the orchestra was lovely in places where one felt a kind of "outdoors" ambience, the wind-blown string phrases readily evoking open spaces, though ready when required to explore emotional responses to the same, whether reflective or passionate. Among other ingratiating moments were were sequences of dialogue between the soloist and, by turns, the respective leaders of the violin seconds and firsts.
"The soloist was given a cadenza-like recitative towards the work's end, splendidly expressive and wide-ranging, and especially notable for some beautifully-managed harmonics, contrasted with great growlings on the lower strings! A reflective mood dominated the work's last pages, leaving a poetic, almost elegiac impression at the end. Splendid work from all concerned, and especially from the young soloist!"
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