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Russian pianist sets fire to Prokofiev

lajohnson@MiamiHerald.com

The Concert Association of Florida's season is morphing into a kind of musical version of ''Can you top this?'' Just when you think you have heard an unbeatable pianist or Russian orchestra the next event serves up something even more spectacular.

On Monday, the State Symphony Orchestra of Russia kicked off its 11-city U.S. tour with an impressive stand at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts sparked by an electrifying star turn by pianist Denis Matsuev.

Led by artistic director and chief conductor Mark Gorenstein, the orchestra revealed itself as outstanding, even among the plethora of excellent Russian ensembles. The symphony possesses a dark, deep-pile sonority with balances dominated by its ample strings. Woodwinds are superb but less tangible, and brass could have been more robust, though the lack of presence may have been partly due to the orchestra's performing without risers.

Three excerpts from Tchaikovsky's The Snow Maiden served notice of the State Symphony's corporate versatility. Gorenstein drew rapt string playing in the central Melodrama, and the Dance of the Buffoons exploded with brilliance and sonic force.

If the orchestra's bravura made the Knight Concert Hall audience sit up, Matsuev's full-metal assault on Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 3 proved jaw dropping.

First-prize winner of the 1998 Tchaikovsky Competition, the six-foot four-inch Siberian brought massive strength and seemingly effortless power to Prokofiev's spiky warhorse. Yet he also brought a nuanced, neo-Classical poise to the central movement's more reflective variations.

It was Matsuev's blazing virtuosity, however, that built the performance up to a fever pitch. Matsuev threw off the finale's gliassandi, octaves and assorted landmines with flawless technique and staggering force, the race to the aggressive, hammering coda providing one of the most thrilling edge-of-the-seat adrenaline rides of the season. Matsuev indulged the vociferous ovations with an equally bravura encore of Grieg's In the Hall of the Mountain King.

Gorenstein had a tough act to follow but managed to maintain the audience buzz with a distinct, largely rewarding take on Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 2.

The State Symphony showed it can deliver a rich, sonorous string tone in the Snow Maiden excerpts, but Gorenstein's approach on Rachmaninoff's über-Romantic symphony took a lean, revisionist form.

Gorenstein paced the music skillfully, with great impact to climaxes and no want of Romantic urgency. Yet, he also drew string playing of surprising transparency, sheering off some of the schmaltz and making the music sound remarkably fresh. The performance was finest in the Adagio, when Gorenstein laid down his baton and guided the long, long lines expansively with his hands, yielding elegant string playing and subtle, dynamic shading rarely heard in this music.

Lawrence A. Johnson is The Miami Herald's classical music critic.

 

Study finds no link between MMR jab and autism

Last updated at 08:23am on 18th March 2008

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No link: Between the MMR jab and autism

A new study has found no evidence to support the idea that the MMR jab damages the intestine and in turn causes autism.

Researchers examined the so-called "leaky gut" theory, which suggests that vaccines such as the triple Measles, Mumps and Rubella jab can damage the wall of the intestine.

This causes digestive problems which lead to the production of peptides, which can damage the brain and possibly cause autism, according to the theory.

The latest study, from researchers at Great Ormond Street Hospital, Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital and the University of Edinburgh, found that children with autism do not produce higher levels of peptides, detectable in their urine.

Researchers examined 65 boys with autism aged five to 11 and 158 boys acting as controls, aged four to 11.

The experts found "no significant differences" between the two groups when it came to levels of peptides.

They said their findings back up earlier studies and claimed theirs is the first to properly compare children with autism with a control group.

Fears over possible links to autism have been blamed for the lower take up of the triple jab, when compared to three separate vaccines.

Dr Hilary Cass, from Great Ormond Street, said: "It is very distressing to have a diagnosis of autism, a lifelong condition.

"Many families are driven to try out interventions which currently have no scientific basis.

"For example, advocates of the leaky gut hypothesis offer children a casein and gluten-free diet which as yet lacks an evidence base.

"Our research throws serious doubt on the putative scientific basis of that diet and indicates that further work is needed to understand the role and outcomes of dietary intervention."

Gluten is the protein found in wheat while casein is found in dairy products.

The study was published in the journal Archives of Diseases in Childhood.

A spokeswoman for the National Autistic Society (NAS) said: "We are aware of anecdotal support for some dietary interventions, particularly those involving the exclusion of wheat and dairy products.

"There is limited evidence about whether or not these diets are effective and concerns have been raised about their unregulated use.

"There is an urgent need for authoritative research into the usefulness of dietary interventions and the gastrointestinal problems experienced by some people with autism, to improve our understanding of the condition, to respond to parents' concerns and to enable us to ensure that there are appropriate services and support in place to meet people's needs."

 

 

 

 

 
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