[Harp-L] Waco Symphony Review




Harmonica player blows away WSO audience


By Carl Hoover | Wednesday, April 8, 2009, 08:46 AM

Always leave them wanting more, goes the show biz maxim and harmonica player Robert Bonfiglio certainly did that at the Waco Symphony Orchestra’s season-ending concert Tuesday night, even after four encore pieces.

The encores, two before the intermission and another two at concert’s close, demonstrated Bonfiglio’s considerable musicianship was matched by crowd-pleasing showmanship.

The WSO’s marvelously balanced performance of Richard Strauss’ “Don Juan” may have been the night’s musical highpoint, but it was Bonfiglio who walked off with the lion’s share of applause.

The tall Bonfiglio, his long hair falling past his shoulders, cut a commanding figure on the Waco Hall stage. That presence grounded his stage dynamism - large hands fluttering here, cupping there, his lithe body crouching and twisting as he played a concert harmonica about the size of a giant chocolate bar

His signature piece, Heitor Villa-Lobos’ lyric, melodic Concerto for Harmonica and Orchestra, seemed to draw its musical inspiration from folk song and bird song, the orchestra providing a textured, rhythmic foundation for solo harmonica lines whose feathery top notes often melted into the air.

After a warm ovation, Bonfiglio pulled a smaller harmonica from his tuxedo jacket and rattled into wailing, honking, foot-stomping tributes to legendary bluesmen Sonny Boy Williamson and Junior Wells, swapping the melodic lines of the Villa-Lobos for thick harmonic chords of the blues.

The musician closed the concert program with a Stephen Foster medley that highlighted the harmonica’s folksy, yet soulful side and American heritage, his instrument singing its way through Foster classics such as “I Dream of Jeannie With The Light Brown Hair,” “Camptown Races,” “Beautiful Dreamer,” “Swanee River” and “Oh Susanna.”

Again, Bonfiglio tugged a smaller harmonica from his pocket and played an exquisitely simple encore of the hymn “Amazing Grace,” whose final note hung suspended above a rapt Waco Hall audience. Next came a quick, stomping blues number, in which he enlisted the cello section in plucking a backbeat, and the evening finally came to an end.




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