Why, you may ask, does the track-listing above not announce 
    the 
Vier Letze Lieder? The reason is that this performance includes 
    a 
fifth song in the shape of 
Malven, which was orchestrated 
    in 2013 by Wolfgang Rihm. More of that in a moment.
    
    It’s with original music by Rihm that this Strauss 150
th 
    anniversary concert begins. 
Ernster Gesang was commissioned by the 
    Philadelphia Orchestra to mark the centenary of the death of Brahms and Rihm 
    took as his inspiration Brahms’s 
Vier Ernst Gesang. We are 
    told in the booklet that his piece “takes over individual motifs and 
    harmonic details from various works by Brahms but pays tribute to [Rihm’s] 
    great predecessor chiefly through its dark and autumnal tone colours.” 
    The work calls for a small-ish ensemble – I’d guess that some 
    30 players are involved in this performance – and all the instruments 
    are from the lower, darker end of the orchestral sound spectrum. There’s 
    a quartet of clarinets, positioned where the first violins would normally 
    sit, and the rest of the ensemble comprises violas, cellos, double basses, 
    bassoons, low brass, horns and timpani. You can hear frequently what are clearly 
    Brahmsian fragments emerge from and recede back into Rihm’s orchestral 
    palette. The music is mainly quite subdued in tone. It’s played here 
    with what appears to be fastidious attention to detail by Thielemann and his 
    players. I found it interesting to listen to though I doubt I shall return 
    to it often.
    
    The Strauss items, however, are heard in performances to which I shall certainly 
    return. The Dresden orchestra had a long and close association with Strauss, 
    premiering several of his works, including, in 1915 under the composer’s 
    direction, 
Eine Alpensinfonie. This work was dedicated to the Dresden 
    Royal Orchestra – an earlier name for the present-day Staatskapelle 
    Dresden.
    
    Anja Harteros has recorded the 
Vier Letze Lieder twice before. She 
    first recorded them in 2007 with this same orchestra under its previous principal 
    conductor, Fabio Luisi, on a disc that also included 
Eine Alpensinfonie 
    (
review). 
    There’s also a 2009 version with Mariss Jansons, which I liked very 
    much (
review). 
    Into this present performance is inserted 
Malven. This was the composer’s 
    very last song, written in 1948 for Maria Jeritza. For some reason she kept 
    the song firmly under wraps and it was not until she died in 1982 that the 
    manuscript was discovered, locked away in her safe. It’s a pretty, pleasing 
    song though I don’t think it remotely matches the stature of any one 
    of the 
Vier Letzte Lieder. Wolfgang Rihm orchestrated it in 2013. 
    He’s done a good job, I think, and has sensitively restrained the orchestral 
    palette to match the tone of the song. I found it very interesting and I hope 
    that it will go on to take its place alongside other orchestrations of Strauss 
    
Lieder. However, I’m not persuaded that it was a good idea 
    to include it within a performance of the other 
Letzte Lieder; it’s 
    placed second. The trouble is that we’re so used to the four songs as 
    a set, albeit the performing order of those songs is sometimes altered, and 
    they’re so perfect as a group that 
Malven here feels like an 
    intrusion. If it had to be included it might have been preferable to place 
    it first. That said Harteros and Thielemann are fine advocates in what I presume 
    was the first performance of the song in its new orchestral guise.
    
    Their partnership is extremely impressive in the other songs too. I was interested 
    to watch Thielemann at work here. He watches his singer like a hawk – 
    ‘September’ is a case in point – so that he’s constantly 
    with her in matters of rubato. He’s a most attentive accompanist and 
    he obtains from the orchestra a glorious rendition of Strauss’s accompaniments. 
    At the end Harteros embraces him warmly; I’m sure she felt throughout 
    the performance that her voice was supported on a wonderful web of orchestral 
    sound and that the skill of the conductor and players gave her the ideal freedom 
    to be expressive.
    
    She sings the songs marvellously. At the very start of ‘Frühling’ 
    I thought I detected a slight edge to the tone but if so that soon disappears 
    and throughout the performance her tone is gorgeous. I admired too the clarity 
    of her diction – I didn’t use the subtitles, which would have 
    been redundant. There’s a ravishing performance of ‘Beim Schlafengehen’ 
    while the singing and playing during ‘Im Abendrot’ is dedicated, 
    the lines beautifully spun. The orchestral postlude is simply exquisite. This 
    is a marvellous performance of the songs that constitute Strauss’s final 
    gift to the soprano voice.
    
    
Eine Alpensinfonie receives a very fine performance too. Thielemann 
    is far too fastidious a conductor to adopt a sensationalist or ‘picture 
    postcard’ style in this work. Instead he offers a finely controlled 
    performance. And though the big moments are superbly realised – a vivid 
    Storm and a majestic panorama from the Summit - I admired even more the less 
    flamboyant, subtle detailing of the performance. Thus, for example, before 
    the warm, expansive Sunrise the mysterious shadings in Strauss’s depiction 
    of Night are played with admirable control. The nature-painting in the Forest 
    is etched in with a keen eye for detail. Perhaps one of the most impressive 
    features in the whole performance is the way in which Thielemann and his players 
    achieve tremendous tension in the build-up to the Storm. There’s an 
    ominous stillness in this passage which is completely compelling.
    
    In the closing minutes of the work the Epilogue is simply wonderful. Here 
    the playing is sovereign and it’s in episodes such as this that you 
    appreciate that when it comes to Strauss orchestras the Staatskapelle Dresden 
    is the Real Deal.
    
    Thielemann’s conducting style is most interesting. Few expressions come 
    across his face and his gesticulations are minimal. He’s clearly a disciple 
    of Strauss’s dictum that the audience should perspire, not the conductor. 
    He is one of the most immaculately turned-out of conductors and he maintains 
    that appearance throughout the concert. Does all this suggest that he’s 
    impassive or soulless? I don’t think so. I suspect that he is very traditional 
    in his approach, believing that the hard work is done in rehearsal and that 
    on the night the conductor should trust his players to execute what’s 
    been determined in rehearsal, making minimal adjustments as necessary. Above 
    all he seems to believe that the conductor shouldn’t get in the way 
    of the music. If all that’s true then I applaud him. Most certainly 
    I wasn’t aware of any disengagement or coolness in these performances.
    
    This is a very fine set of performances and the music-making has been very 
    well preserved on this DVD. The camera work is excellent: it’s to the 
    point and does not distract in any way. The sound, too, is very good. This 
    would be a splendid addition to the collection of any Strauss devotee. The 
    concert was 
reviewed 
    for MusicWeb International Seen and Heard by Michael Cookson, who clearly 
    found his evening in the Semperoper a memorable experience.
    
    
John 
    Quinn
    
    Previous review (Blu-ray): 
Simon 
    Thompson (Recording of the Month)