[Harp-L] Changing the perception, one symphony at a time



Harmonica helps tear down walls
Low and high art collide at latest symphony performance

Monday, March 7, 2005

By GARY PANETTA

of the Journal Star
A Review

PEORIA - A harmonica player? The blues? Selections from Elvis Presley?

This is supposed to be the Peoria Symphony Orchestra, right?

Among the cheering, clapping, appreciative audience members Saturday night, I suspect there were at least a few purists who left grumbling about the music of Richard Wagner and Bedrich Smetana having to share the stage with rock 'n' roll and a harmonica virtuoso named Robert Bonfiglio.

I was not among them. I liked hearing that artificial, arbitrary wall of separation dividing high art and popular culture totter and fall, if only this once. Grungy, nasty, foot-stomping, wailing harmonica blues made a fitting combination with the likes of Wagner, a composer hardly famous for his restraint.

At any rate, Bonfiglio is to the harmonica what Paganini was to the violin (Bonfiglio's long hair even reminded me a little of an artist's rendering of the Italian virtuoso), and I for one couldn't hear enough of him. Neither, apparently, could audience members, who responded with refreshing, low-art enthusiasm - clapping their hands, stomping their feet and cheering whether Bonfiglio was performing Elvis Presley's "Hound Dog" or traditional blues.

Such is the harmonica's accustomed territory. A three-movement bona fide classical concerto isn't the harmonica's usual stomping ground, but you would be shocked how compelling the instrument sounds: as virtuosic as a violin but with a difference. The difference is a pure, eerie quality that composer Heitor Villa-Lobos exploits to the fullest in the opening of his Concerto for Harmonica. Bonfiglio's performance - full of slurs, rapid scales and percussive intensity - was a tour de force.




This archive was generated by a fusion of Pipermail 0.09 (Mailman edition) and MHonArc 2.6.8.