Gramophone – September 2019

(singke) #1
gramophone.co.uk GRAMOPHONE SEPTEMBER 2019 57

asuddenfleeting(andglorious)vision,
withoutpomposityorunearned
grandiosity.Everythinginproportion,
incontext.
Heavenlylifefindsapprovalinthebright
andvibrantsoundofsopranoSofiaFomina,
whoserapidvibratoandlivelyawareness
ofthetext’shigh-jinksallringtrue.
Ipersonallycravemore‘spin’andfloatation
intherepeatedrefrain–buthercharacter
certainlychimeswithJurowski’svery
‘immediate’viewofthepiece,wherethe
close-upsareplentifulandrevealing.
EdwardSeckerson

Mahler
SymphonyNo 9
BambergSymphonyOrchestra/
HerbertBlomstedt
AccentusFbACC30477(83’• DDD)
RecordedliveattheJoseph-Keilberth-Saal,
Bamberg,June 2018

SchoolofBarbirolli.
Thatwasmyfirst
thoughtasthe
falteringpulseof
theopeningbarsusheredinthewarmand
consolingfirsttheme,firstheardinthe
second,notfirst,violins.Nohintsofar

thatadarknightofthesoulmightbe
imminent.Thereisfireinthebellyofthe
beastasthefirstgreatclimaxwashesover
usandBlomstedtissuretoemphasisethe
cynicalsneerofMahler’sstoppedhorns.
Buttheimpendingnightmareisasyetat
armslength.
SothisisareadingofMahler’slast
completedsymphony(though,ofcourse,
itisactuallyhisTenthsinceDasLiedvon
derErdewasdeliberately,superstitiously,
givennoordinalnumber)whichforallits
defianceandresiliencetakesamellower
viewofitslongday’sjourneyintonight.
Itislessfebrile,lessneuroticthanthose
readingsfromBernsteinorTennstedtor
evenAbbado.Theincrementalbuilding
ofthefirstmovementisintenserather
thanunhinged,thougheachsuccessive
‘collapse’certainlydelivers,withthe
roaroftrombonesatthebiggestofthem
(theclimaxofthedevelopment)quite
tremendous.ButBlomstedtismore
abouttheshadowyrecessesofthisfirst
movementandthetendernessheultimately
coaxesfromtheresourcefulBamberg
SymphonyOrchestra.
Theinnermovementssuggestthatthe
heroofthepiece(thatis,Mahlerhimself)
maygorathermorequietlyintothedark
night.Thesecond-movementLändler
favoursgood-naturedebullienceoverany

suggestion that it might indeed be a
dance of death. It’s a gentler, less punchy
country dance. Charm rather than menace
exudes. Even the contrabassoon at the
close sounds cuddly. And then comes the
Rondo-Burleske, which has rigour but no
real teeth. Again, even the uncouth ‘off-
key’ E flat clarinet has no malice and barely
a hint of derision when he mocks the
Trio’s attempt to dig deeper. Those
pages – with their poetic premonition of
the finale – are indeed heartfelt, the dying
glissando in flute and oboe not ugly but
entirely serene.
The Bamberg strings are a warm
embrace in the finale and the generous
saturation of sound towards the far-
reaching horizon reminds us just how
extraordinary this movement is. But
ultimately Blomstedt offers a more
intimate, less ‘cosmic’ letting-go; and
his refusal to hint at the infinite by taking
all the remaining time in the world over
those last pages, as Abbado and certainly
Bernstein do (Abbado prefers to invoke his
eternal silence after the music stops) means
that one comes away from this performance
with less of a sense of finality. It wasn’t
Mahler’s last word, of course, but it was
still a hard-fought-for peace, and Mahler
without the neurosis just isn’t the full story.
Edward Seckerson

ORCHESTRAL REVIEWS

Intense rather than unhinged: Herbert Blomstedt brings tenderness and intimacy to Mahler’s Ninth Symphony

PHOTOGRAPHY:


ANDREAS HERZAU

Free download pdf