A few months ago I reviewed 
                  the new recording of Shostakovich’s last symphony by Vasily 
                  Petrenko, which is part of his Naxos cycle of the symphonies 
                  with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. I was pretty 
                  enthusiastic, concluding that the recording “strikes me 
                  as being excellent both in terms of the interpretation and the 
                  execution.” However, my colleague, Dan Morgan, was much 
                  less admiring and his views found support in an interesting 
                  discussion on the MusicWeb 
                  Message Board. One name that cropped up more than once as 
                  a comparator to Petrenko was that of Bernard Haitink. I’ve 
                  admired this excellent and deeply musical conductor for as long 
                  as I can remember but for some reason I missed most of his Decca 
                  Shostakovich symphony cycle, including the Fifteenth. It seemed 
                  to me that it would be interesting to hear him in that symphony 
                  so a few weeks ago I invested in a copy of this much more recent 
                  recording. 
                    
                  Listening to Haitink’s complete performance convinced 
                  me that here is a very considerable interpretation, splendidly 
                  played and very well recorded. I then decided to compare this 
                  recording with the Petrenko account so I listened to each movement 
                  in turn in both versions. What emerged was that Petrenko comes 
                  out pretty well in the comparison but in two movements I think 
                  there is a clear winner. 
                    
                  Honours are pretty even in the first movement. Both conductors 
                  adopt similar tempi and, indeed, the overall timings of their 
                  respective performances are within three seconds of each other. 
                  Petrenko drives the music forward and his RLPO play crisply 
                  and with spirit. The music emerges as highly charged and energetic. 
                  I detect a bit more weight of tone from the Dutch orchestra, 
                  the strings in particular, though that may be due not just to 
                  the excellence of the players but also to the famed acoustics 
                  of the Concertgebouw and also the skill of the RCOI Live engineers. 
                  If I say that Petrenko’s way with the music sounds a little 
                  more brash I don’t mean that in a derogatory way; it suits 
                  the music. 
                    
                  The opening seven minutes or so of the second movement mainly 
                  comprise music that is spare in texture - chiefly alternating 
                  a brass chorale from the Eleventh symphony and yearning cello 
                  solos. Petrenko does well to sustain the tension across these 
                  paragraphs and the dissonant wind chords that punctuate the 
                  music are suitably glacial. If anything, Haitink’s brass 
                  players are even more sombre and imposing of tone and the RCO’s 
                  principal cello is outstanding. Haitink is equally successful 
                  in sustaining the tension and the thread of the musical argument 
                  across these desolate pages. Eventually an important trombone 
                  solo is reached. Up to this point Petrenko has been a bit more 
                  spacious - the trombone solo begins at 7:55 in his recording 
                  and at 6:52 in Haitink’s - perhaps the RCO reading is 
                  a bit more strongly focused. However, when we reach the trombone 
                  solo I have a clear preference for the Dutch performance. The 
                  Liverpool trombonist is excellent but the Dutch player’s 
                  tone has an edge to it that imparts a greater sense of foreboding. 
                  Eventually Shostakovich achieves a huge trademark climax (at 
                  11:01 in Petrenko’s reading, 9:57 in Haitink’s) 
                  and the impact is all the greater because this is the first 
                  time - and note how far into the movement we are - that we have 
                  heard the full orchestra. Petrenko handles that climax very 
                  well but I sense a bit more malevolence in the gripping way 
                  that Haitink delivers it. In his hands the brass chorale at 
                  the end of the movement is really desolate. 
                    
                  In the brief third movement Haitink conveys the sardonic humour 
                  though, by the side of Petrenko, his performance is more weighty 
                  - note the firm double bass chords in the opening pages in his 
                  reading - and serious. Petrenko’s approach is more pungent 
                  and also more nimble and fleet of foot. With him you sense Till 
                  Eulenspiegel thumbing his nose, which is surely right. The music 
                  occasionally sounds a little clipped, not least in the solo 
                  violin passages, but overall Petrenko is a clear winner here. 
                  
                    
                  However, I believe that the fourth movement swings the balance 
                  in Haitink’s favour. Both versions start well though Haitink’s 
                  brass are darker and more full of foreboding in the Wagner quotations 
                  at the outset. Where think things tilt decisively is at the 
                  long violin theme immediately after the three-note Tristan 
                  motif - at 1:18 in Petrenko’s performance, 1:23 with Haitink. 
                  Haitink makes the long string melody flow better than Petrenko; 
                  the younger conductor’s speed sounds more laboured while 
                  the elder is completely convincing . Michael Steinberg hits 
                  the nail on the head in describing this theme as “wanly 
                  disconsolate”; Petrenko makes it sound a bit too tragic 
                  and I think that his speed is a bit too slow for a passage that’s 
                  marked Allegretto; Haitink is just right and strikes 
                  a more enigmatic note. I emphasise this point because so much 
                  of what follows flows from this melody and the mood it establishes. 
                  It seems to me that the string-dominated passacaglia that follows 
                  is more persuasive at the Dutchman’s more purposeful tempo. 
                  As the movement’s big climax approaches, because his basic 
                  tempo is somewhat swifter, Haitink is able to invest the build-up 
                  with more urgency. Just to give you an indication of relative 
                  speeds - and remember both performances arrived at the start 
                  of the violin melody at about the same time - Haitink gets to 
                  the climax at 8:54, Petrenko at 10:08. Both conductors deliver 
                  the climax powerfully though, for me, Haitink’s way with 
                  it is the darker and more forbidding - his brass and horns are 
                  superbly telling hereabouts. One other point worthy of note, 
                  is that the bass line of the passacaglia emerges with just a 
                  bit more clarity in the RCO Live recording. The Dutch recording 
                  of the closing pages is a bit better than the Naxos sound; there’s 
                  a little more distance on the tinkling, chattering percussion. 
                  
                    
                  So, while Petrenko’s recording emerges with great credit 
                  from a detailed comparison the Haitink has the edge, especially 
                  in the finale. I still think that Petrenko offers a fine recording 
                  of this enigmatic symphony but Haitink brings more gravitas 
                  to the score - though that works against him in the third movement 
                  - and delves more deeply below the music’s surface than 
                  does his young colleague. The Naxos recording is very good but 
                  the RCO Live sound is even better - it’s a hybrid SACD 
                  but I’ve listened to it as a conventional CD. Richard 
                  Whitehouse’s Naxos notes have the edge, especially for 
                  someone coming new to the work, though RCO Live provide some 
                  musical examples, which is handy. As for the playing, the RLPO 
                  are by no means put in the shade; they offer excellent playing 
                  but there are times when the extra depth of tone reminds one 
                  that on the Dutch disc one is listening to one of the world’s 
                  great orchestras. 
                    
                  However, it must be pointed out that the Haitink disc is offered 
                  at full price and, with no coupling, represents distinctly short 
                  measure while Petrenko, at a lower price point, includes the 
                  Second Symphony. I suppose that’s a question of price 
                  versus value. 
                    
                  In summary, anyone who has already invested in the Petrenko 
                  recording of the Fifteenth or anyone wanting a good recording 
                  at less than full price can rest content. However, this Haitink 
                  performance, taped at concerts, offers a deep and impressive 
                  view of a symphony that can be elusive. This is an excellent 
                  reminder of what a superb and distinguished conductor Bernard 
                  Haitink is and it’s a recording that I’m very glad 
                  that I have added to my collection. 
                    
                  John Quinn 
                Masterwork Index: Symphony 
                  15