Even after the double centenary of 2010-2011 the flood of Mahler
recordings shows no sign of abating. I’m not complaining, mind,
but experience suggests most of these newcomers will be serviceable
rather than outstanding. As far as the Fourth is concerned fairly
recent exceptions include Iván Fischer’s two recordings, one
with his Budapest Festival Orchestra (review),
the other with the Concertgebouw (review).
Both have a life-renewing radiance and lightness of touch that’s
most refreshing. Not only that, Fischer’s soprano Miah Persson
– a seasoned Mahlerian – is near ideal in the child-heaven
finale. Then there are Claudio Abbado’s Lucerne accounts, one
of which I reviewed
on DVD in 2011. As for Markus Stenz’s Fourth – like much
of his recently completed Oehms cycle – it's nowhere near the
best available.
That’s before we even consider the classic Mahler Fourths. Of
those the Otto
Klemperer version with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf – reissued
as part of a superbly re-mastered Warner/EMI box – has proved
one of the most durable. George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra’s
CBS/Sony Fourth is still much revered, but even a high-res HDTT re-master
can’t disguise the age and general fierceness of this 1960s
recording. Marc Albrecht, chief conductor of the Netherlands Philharmonic,
will be hard-pressed to equal, let alone surpass, any of the versions
listed here. Thus far he’s only recorded Das Lied von der
Erde (Pentatone PTC5186502), a reading that I found rather wayward
and not terribly communicative. In short, it doesn’t begin to
challenge the best in the bulging catalogue.
Alas, the first movement of his Mahler Fourth doesn’t fill me
with confidence. There’s a distance to both the reading and
the recording that isn’t ideal in music that thrives on point
and sparkle. Albrecht’s deliberately articulated phrases and
some unexpected sonorities took me by surprise too. The former work
against a seamless flow of musical ideas and the latter are just plain
odd. Most disfiguring, though, is the first big tutti, which is unforgivably
crude and overbearing. The recorded balance is partly to blame, but
then Albrecht doesn’t scale this performance at all well either.
The second movement, with its scordatura violin part, is
no better. Mahler's Hein-inspired grotesqueries are laid on thick
and Albrecht almost brings the music to a halt at times. There’s
no real spookiness or spontaneity here; instead we get a ponderous,
rather gilded response to Mahler’s very precise and colourful
writing. Most unsettling, though, is the sense that the dynamics of
this recording – not to mention the degree of musical contrast
– is constrained in a way that seems almost oppressive. In any
event that’s absolutely not what one wants to hear
in this most transparent of scores.
Although death is woven into the very fabric of this symphony - especially
in the third movement - most conductors maintain a lightness of touch
here that prevents this section from sounding too dirge-like.
Unfortunately Albrecht isn't one of them, and what should be music
of hushed intensity comes across as leaden and lugubrious. Also, as
I feared, that liberating tutti is both blatant and disproportionate.
The close, hard-struck timps are particularly unpleasant. After that
tortuous cortège the lovely, light-filled Wunderhorn finale
sounds quite bizarre. The distantly placed soprano Elizabeth Watts
is pleasing enough, but there’s little of the wide-eyed wonder
or fine vocal shading that Persson and others bring to the piece.
There’s so much that doesn’t work here, both in terms
of performance and sonics, that trying to find positives is all but
impossible. Indeed, after listening to this download several times
I gave up looking. I’m particularly disappointed by Polyhymnia’s
recording, especially as their recent Shostakovich Leningrad
with Paavo Järvi and the Russian National Orchestra is firmly in the
demonstration class (review);
their work for RCO Live tends to be first-rate as well. As I hinted
earlier we really don't need all these new Mahler recordings,
as most are very ordinary - or worse. Three guesses where this one
belongs.
A dreary, life-sapping Fourth. Even the sound is lacklustre.
Dan Morgan
twitter.com/mahlerei