Gustav MAHLER (1860-1911)
Symphony No. 9
[84:41]
Symphony No. 10: Adagio [28:12]
Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra/Paavo Järvi
rec. live. Kloster Eberbach, Germany. 27-28 June 2009 (9), 28-29 June 2008
(10)
Bonus: Introductions to both symphonies and the Mahler Project by Paavo
Järvi [18:30]
Subtitles for bonus in English, German, Korean, Japanese
Video: 1080i 16:9 Sound DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and LPCM Stereo
[136:00]
Review of DTS-HD surround
C MAJOR Blu-ray 729804 [112:53]
I have commented repeatedly in reviewing this series that Paavo Järvi is a
very consistent Mahlerian. Here in the Ninth and the Adagio of the Tenth his
grasp falters. Both performances exhibit the characteristics noted earlier:
fast passages are a little faster than usual, slow music is slower and wind
details are always brought out. Somehow this does not pay off as it did in
the other symphonies (3 & 4 -
review; 7 & 8 -
review) (I haven't heard 5 and 6). It would be misleading to suggest
that nothing works out; much of the Ninth is excellent. The Tenth is
different because he only performs the Adagio and that seems to me
deficient.
Starting with the talks: Järvi views the Ninth as a work in which all
theatricality has been excised and sounding 'like chamber
music'. He describes the Tenth as almost too painful to hear. This
last is a weak excuse for his failure to perform the Cooke performing
version. As a member of the younger generation of Mahlerians he should
really have accepted it as part of the canon; indeed his orchestra have
already recorded it, in 1992, with Eliahu Inbal. It is, in my view, a
blemish on the series. Talking of the project overall he states that
'nice playing is not adequate', adding, 'nice anything
is not adequate'. He speaks with great affection of the Frankfurt
orchestra and is undoubtedly right that they are a superb orchestra who play
with all the commitment required in these magnificent works.
The Ninth is the main work to consider. The opening steals in as if from
far away. The entire opening paragraph has a sense of hesitancy and Järvi
uses the rhythmic instability of the music to emphasize that uncertainty. He
achieves the seamless tempo transitions Mahler asks for but overall this is
a very slow
Andante, too slow for its own good because the
precipitous collapse portrayed by Mahler fails to hit the listener as it
should. For an account of this music that leaves one shaking, one should
turn to the Leipzig/Chailly blu-ray on Accentus. Järvi takes the second
movement at a relaxed tempo which does encourage some beautiful solo playing
and highlights the gentleness present in the music. By contrast the
Rondo is very fast, as Mahler asks, and this generates some extreme
variation making an already alarming piece still more nerve-wracking. The
strings really dig in to the opening of the great final
Adagio and
the conductor demonstrates a more intense grasp of all this huge paragraph.
The music ends in stunned silence and the audience hardly dare to start
applauding. Even so - I could not escape the feeling of disappointment after
all the good things in earlier symphonies and in this present performance. I
turned to the abovementioned Leipzig/Chailly disc and found a performance of
quite demoniac power and furthermore a recording not suffering from the
so-so picture quality of this entire Frankfurt series. The sound too was
much wider in range, both of dynamics and frequencies. When combined with
the truncated Tenth, this present disc has to be classed as respectable but
simply not up to the earlier issues.
With none of the Blu-ray cycles involving a single conductor being
complete, Abbado did not reach the Eighth or Tenth and Chailly is yet to
complete, this almost-complete Järvi series is well worth hearing. There is
nothing second-class about the Frankfurt Radio Symphony and Paavo Järvi in
this music.
Dave Billinge