Time was when Shostakovich’s Seventh Symphony was 
    regarded as something of an embarrassment, even by those who championed the 
    composer’s cause. In a welcome reversal the piece has now been rehabilitated, 
    as the parade of new recordings confirms. Among the latter is Mark Elder’s 
    2013 account with the Hallé Orchestra, its virtues intact despite poor balances 
    (
review). 
    Valery Gergiev’s Mariinsky recording from 2012 comes up trumps too (
review), 
    and Dmitri Kitaienko’s – which dates from 2003 – is one 
    of the glories of his Capriccio box (
review). 
    There are others, such as 
Vasily 
    Petrenko’s and 
Andris 
    Nelsons', which have excited others far more than they have me.
    
    When Paavo Järvi’s 
Leningrad recording was first announced 
    I really didn’t think it would be a contender. In the past this conductor 
    has struck me as meticulous almost to a fault, and not the most communicative 
    of baton wavers. That said, a Russian orchestra playing Shostakovich usually 
    demands a listen. Factor in PentaTone’s reputation for fine recordings 
    and it would seem this new album is a decent prospect. Even then I must admit 
    to feeling somewhat blasé; with so many potent rivals what more could Järvi 
    bring to the piece?
    
    As it happens, quite a lot. For a start the half-hour first movement, with 
    its long, much-derided march, is full of surprises. There’s a sweetness 
    to the introductory section – an innocence, if you like – that 
    seems very apt in the light of what’s to come. Sunny and unsuspecting 
    this music is played with a simple loveliness that had me hearing the notes 
    anew. Even more impressive is the superb recording, whose perspectives are 
    as close to the concert-hall experience as I’ve heard in a very long 
    time.
    
    When it materialises the march is spine-tingling; it’s well paced, without 
    haste or histrionics, and it’s all the more effective for that. The 
    Russian woodwinds, so naturally caught, are first-rate and those cymbal clashes 
    are powerful but proportionate. That’s very refreshing in a work that’s 
    often presented in a crudely filmic way, not least when so much of the score’s 
    fine detail is allowed to shine through. This is the very antithesis of Elder’s 
    St-Vitus-like version, yet by some unexplained alchemy Järvi never wants for 
    strength or intensity.
    
    The oh-so-pliant start to the 
Moderato has seldom emerged with such 
    disarming loveliness, its quiet, affectionate recollections accompanied by 
    a wistful smile. The breath-bating hear-through quality of the playing and 
    recording beggars belief; it really is as if one were at a live concert, caught 
    in that almost hypnotic state where one communes with musicians and audience 
    alike. Also, Järvi adds a penetrating chill to this spectral music, the like 
    of which I’ve not heard since Gergiev’s deeply unsettling performance 
    at the RFH some years ago.
    
    In a composer – and a symphony – that’s no stranger to banalities 
    it’s remarkable that Järvi’s discreet, unhurried approach brings 
    with it a sustained coherence and logic that never sell the music short. Even 
    the bleak, upward-winding start to the 
Adagio has a beauty that far 
    from minimising the underlying grief actually seems to intensify it. The RNO 
    strings sound glorious, the dark-toned woodwinds even more so, and it’s 
    impossible not to be moved – and mightily so – by these spare, 
    artless utterances. Indeed, I can’t recall the score being laid bare 
    in such a way, its beating heart open to the elements.
    
    One might think that such attention to detail is the enemy of purpose and 
    momentum, but in this case it most certainly isn’t. Even the rollicking, 
    circus-like episodes – played without recourse to vulgar emphasis – 
    have a certain dignity that I find most affecting. And that’s the nub 
    of it; this is a performance that eschews the fearsome in favour of the fragile, 
    and favours the individual over the faceless crowd. Indeed, there were times 
    when I wished the ravishing 
Adagio would never end, such is the heartfelt 
    eloquence with which it’s delivered.
    
    This conductor continues as he began, with a calm, clear-eyed 
Allegro 
    non troppo. As so often the result is anything but prosaic, with 
    the fleeting jauntiness of the first movement caught to perfection. Järvi 
    also constructs a mean climax, and the music’s underlying jubilation 
    never succumbs to emptiness or anarchy. The nobility here is entirely personal 
    – a tribute to the indomitability of the human spirit, perhaps – 
    and if Järvi seems a tad measured at this point it’s because there’s 
    so much to filter out from the surrounding tumult. At the same time tension 
    builds – quietly, unobtrusively – and all the while one has to 
    marvel at the equally discreet virtuosity of this Russian band.
    
    It’s not just about detail though, for Järvi shapes the music in such 
    a way that hidden rhythms and phrases are disinterred as well. Goodness, is 
    there no end to the revelations of this performance? As for the finale it 
    unfolds with an unforced, passionately voiced grandeur that couldn’t 
    be further from the bombast that some find here. That should come as no surprise, 
    given the number of times Järvi defeats expectations in this paradigm-shifting 
    performance. Even if you prefer cruder, more equivocal accounts of this symphony 
    you simply cannot overlook this extraordinary alternative.
    
    An unaffected, deeply humanising Seventh; quite possibly the best thing Paavo 
    Järvi has ever done.
    
    
Dan Morgan
    twitter.com/mahlerei