On Saturday, in the second of the Colorado Springs Philharmonic’s Masterworks series for the season, Conductor Lawrence Leighton Smith led his splendid orchestra in a celebration of French, turn-of-the-century composers.
French works of the period are melodic, breezy and sometimes quite light. And there’s nothing wrong with that because there is also a delightful accessibility, a romance even, to this repertoire, which in included pieces by Dukas, Chausson, Saint-Saëns, Fauré and Ravel. Debussy, I’m sorry to say, was sadly missing from the line-up this evening.
If there was a star that night, it would have to be violin soloist Michael Hanson, concertmaster for the orchestra. First, Hanson navigated Chausson’s lush Poème quite handily and with real feeling. But it was in Saint-Saëns’ violin showpiece, Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso, that he really shined, moving from lyrical sections to the bowing and fingering that wore me out just watching it.
The orchestra followed Smith’s lead to flawless effect with a stunning clarity and precision. And I’ve seldom seen a conductor as plugged into an orchestra as he was. That relationship was evident the performance.
The highpoints of the evening, though, came after intermission. The two Ravel works – Valses Nobles et Sentimentales and La Valse – were superb. Both are interpretations of the waltz, of course, but Ravel, ever the pointillist, deconstructs the sound. That’s especially true in La Valse, where he juxtaposes pure waltz sound with an unexpected perversion of it — turbulance, uncertainty, yearning. Although firmly tied to traditional melody, it’s a collage that feels curiously modern. Lovely.
“WE’LL ALWAYS HAVE PARIS”
Colorado Springs Philharmonic
WHEN: 2:30 p.m. Oct. 25
WHERE: Pikes Peak Center, 190 S. Cascade Ave.
TICKETS: $14 to $54; csphilharmonic.org



