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Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756
- 1791)
Symphony No. 39 in E flat major, K453 (1788) [31:03]
Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K550 (1788) [35:05]
Orchestra Mozart/Claudio Abbado
rec. live, Auditorium Teatro Manzoni, Bologna, June /2008, June
2009. DDD
ARCHIV PRODUKTION 477 9792 [66:11]
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The introduction to Symphony 39 from Claudio Abbado
has grandeur, smoothness and works up to an appreciable tension.
The opening theme of the first movement itself slips in with
graceful suaveness but the tutti which follows adds
edge and majesty to the introduction’s grandeur. Orchestra Mozart’s
strings can be as delicate or as rugged as you wish and often
in quick succession. Abbado has mastered the trick of getting
a lightness and transparency of texture whenever he wants and
also a sunny bite to the brass when required. As throughout
this CD Abbado keenly exploits Mozart’s contrasts of nuance,
dynamic, clarity and variety of rhythm and texture.
Abbado conducts this modern orchestra in a historically informed
manner. As a result he achieves a seductive hybrid sound interesting
to compare with period instrument performance. I listened to
the recording made in 1990 by the London Classical Players/Roger
Norrington (Virgin Veritas 5620102). Norrington’s introduction
is more provocative with combative timpani and brass more markedly
contrasted with wispy strings, but the latter’s ethereal quality
itself is unable to create much tension as the climax builds.
In the first movement this pattern of demure strings pitted
against strident brass continues, all sentences strongly punctuated
but less of the sense of overall paragraphs that you get with
Abbado. Norrington is more exciting but Abbado is more temperate
and humane.
Abbado’s slow movement (tr. 2) is warm, smooth, polite, cultivated
and there seems to be all the time in the world to enjoy it.
It’s intently observed, so only one note difference in the phrase
from 1:18 and more in the following phrase creates an awareness
of hard won ease. Soon you’re taken further out of your comfort
zone by the unexpected urgency of the F minor episode which
first appears from 2:37. I have never heard the cellos’ rising
figure at the close (from 7:52) so beautifully shaped and wistfully
articulated. Now Norrington also has a fine blend of lightness
and warmth, but the steely quality of the airy period strings
means that the central section, though more pungent, is less
contrasted in tone than with modern instruments.
Abbado’s Minuet is stylishly varied between the opening rugged
tutti, through strict observation of the wind’s chugging
crotchets, and the sprightlier elegance of the second phrase
largely for strings alone. Clarinet and flute are lyrical in
the Trio but the haunting part of its second section is achieved
by Abbado’s wistful first violins. Norrington’s faster Allegretto
gives you less time to take in the variety of the first violin’s
pointing in the first section and their unexpectedly sudden
sadness in the Trio.
Abbado’s finale (tr. 4) is from the start all bubbling enjoyment
and it’s part of the fun that Mozart fakes a second theme from
0:36 by just giving the flutes and bassoons bits of melody to
echo the first violins’ opening theme and then sustain that
theme while the first violins sail off into their own musing
expatiation. Abbado is tougher for the development’s cloudier
harmonies and allows the horns to be more ominous, but you know
the movement’s opening bubble isn’t going to burst. Norrington’s
finale is on the whole lighter and sunnier, his strings more
svelte and his horns tending to jollity.
The opening movement of Symphony 40 (tr. 5) is marked
Molto allegro yet in Abbado’s refined approach I don’t
feel the Molto element. I appreciate the contours,
dynamic contrasts and troubled atmosphere but Abbado seems happiest
in the second theme (0:49). The rest is about trying to recapture
its nonchalant smoothness. The development is more downcast
and the progression of the melody grows more stinging. The coda
is more orderly than emotive: try the first violins’ chromatic
descent from 7:27 which has a silky sadness. You might feel
that’s sufficiently musically explicit, but ought it to be more
despairing? If you think it should you’ll prefer Norrington
whose full movement timing at 6:57 against Abbado’s 7:48 provides
more urgency, tension and latterly features starker contributions
from the horns.
Abbado adopts a good Andante for the slow movement
(tr. 6) which lets it be warm yet flow on. This makes for a
captivating rise of the first violins’ counter-theme at 0:28
and a luxuriantly ornate parade of demisemiquaver figures thereafter.
The second theme (0:53) is serenely distilled. You note the
change to a more questioning first violins’ counter-theme at
7:18 in the development but by 8:41 their sighs are in the nature
of sunny savouring. At 12:09 against Abbado’s 13:34 Norrington
is faster in this movement too but this isn’t advantageous because
although he is dreamy, mystical, poetic, even balletic by turns,
the movement as a whole has less density.
Abbado takes the Minuet (tr. 7) at a fair swing as appropriate
to its Allegretto marking but at the same time has
a curiously carefree manner for G minor. The frequent syncopation,
especially that between first and second violins from 0:44,
is undeniably confrontational yet Abbado also brings to it a
purely objective quality. The G major Trio is attractively calm
and innocent, enhanced by some gorgeous horns in duet in the
second section. Norrington’s Minuet on the other hand, unmistakably
grim in manner, allows him to effect a more marked contrast
with his fresh and airy Trio.
In the finale (tr. 8) Abbado finds a surprisingly festive quality
by relishing the lightness of the opening soft proposition of
its first theme rather more than its immediately loud second
phrase. The marking here is Allegro assai and the assai
element is present with some terrifically trim playing by all
the strings. The second theme (1:03) is played as if an idyllic
vision and is suitably cowed when it returns in the recapitulation
in the minor. The stark sustained cries in the wind begun by
the horns at 4:10 have due prominence without disturbing the
overall impression of disciplined, controlled energy. Norrington
is more fiery but also manages to find more contrast in a sunnier
second theme.
Abbado offers a satisfying blend of the sumptuous tone of a
modern orchestra with the lightness of articulation and rhythmic
clarity of historically informed performance. His accounts have
more nuance than Norrington’s but the latter’s are more dramatic
in contrast, partly because of the more raw sound of the brass
and timpani. Abbado’s urbane, refined approach is more convincing
for Symphony 39 than Symphony 40 where at times the minor key
presentation seems to me smoothed over.
Michael Greenhalgh
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