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SEEN AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Schumann, Brahms: Antonio Meneses (cello), Daniel Hope (violin), Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, Christian Thielemann (conductor) Gasteig, Munich 11. 5.2008 (JFL)
Brahms: Double Concerto op.102
Schumann: Herrmann & Dorothea Overture, Symphony No.4
Robert Schumann’s “Herrmann & Dorothea Overture” op.136 is probably
not better known than Goethe's once loved and now forgotten 'dyllic
epic' which served as its inspiration and namesake. Schumann may not
have composed grand music for it, but in concert this utterly
charming, rather light and airy work is a splendid curtain raiser –
just like the opening ‘throw-away’ joke is sometimes the best part
of a Sunday cartoon.
The fact that the overture is laced with quotes from the
Marseillaise – often and obviously – goes back to Schumann’s
intention to write a whole opera on Goethe's subject which opens
with a scene of German refugees fleeing from advancing French
Soldiers (though if you listen to Schumann, you’d think
a flock of frolicking Frenchmen on their way to a boating party was
on their heels.) Even if Christian Thielemann, conducting the Munich
Philharmonic in this opening Schumann-salvo of their May 11th
concert, isn’t known for a particularly light touch, the overture
came across as positively, quintessentially gay.
Before Schumann continued, Brahms’
Double Concerto was on the program. Cellist Antonio Meneses must
know this concerto well enough – not the least because
he first recorded it in 1981 with Anne-Sophie Mutter under Karajan.
On Hänssler Profil he also has a recording
with Thomas Zehetmair under Kurt Sanderling. Alas, his knowledge
turned to routine in this performance. Entries were not particularly
clean, the cello’s tone unlovely above mp. On the plus side
there were nicely articulated pizzicatos and a fine, electric
pianissimo. The orchestra around him played boomily, sometimes
sloppily (missed entries, again), as if no one particularly cared
about it, and with wayward horns in the third movement. None of this
mattered though, because one man heroically combined and
focused everything that was bad about this performance on himself:
Daniel Hope delivered a performance that was just shy of
insulting.
Slinking through the work un-(or under)rehearsed, playing out of
tune notes with imprecision and as if his technical ability were
taxed to the maximum (it shouldn’t be, by this concerto), the result
was a travesty. Tinny, rough whenever digging into the notes, every
double stop woefully approximated: this was no way to treat the
audience, or Brahms for that matter. How the two
artists deduced that the – admittedly indiscriminate – applause
demanded an encore, I don’t know. But in honor of Menahem Pressler,
who retired his Beaux Arts Trio (in which Meneses and Hope were his
most recent partners), they played a part just for violin and cello
from Beethoven’s “Ich bin der Schneider Kakadu” trio. This might not
have boded well for the Schumann Fourth Symphony yet to come, but
from the depths of artistic poverty, the concert catapulted the keen
listener to the pinnacles of musical triumph.
Schumann’s chronologically second, but then heavily revised and
last-to-be-published Symphony had
recently been performed in Munich by Kent Nagano in its original
version. A fine performance, indeed.
The Mahler edition of the Symphony has been recorded excellently
by Riccardo Chailly. But as if proof needed to be administered that
Schumann can be all shades of fantastic without the meddling of
others or by reverting to earlier drafts, Christian Thielemann put
down a performance that was sumptuous and serious, never tedious,
truly romantic - though not in the neurotic or wild and untamed way
in which Leonard Bernstein makes Schumann work so well. (Well enough
on his DG recordings, better still on the out of print Sony.)
Cohesive, swelling mightily, receding tenderly again, massive but
not thick, this was a totality of harmonious noise played
phenomenally well by his Munich Philharmonic players. Whether the
cellos buzzing in true excitement, or the impeccable ensemble work
of the brass, or the commanding volume of the whole apparatus in the
finale, it felt like Thielemann put his foot down as one of the
foremost interpreters of Schumann. Given
his recent success with the ‘difficult’ Schumann Requiem I am
ready to believe that he really is.
I must either completely re-evaluate his previous Schumann
recordings (1
with 4, then
2 and
3 with the Philharmonia) which I remember dismissing rather
carelessly, or else hope for new Schumann recorded with the Munich
Philharmonic which, if DG should decide to go that way, I’d await
most eagerly.
Jens F. Laurson
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