Wolfgang Amadeus
MOZART
Symphonies
36 in C, K.425
"Linz", 38 in D, K.504 - "Prague"
40 in g, K.550, 41 in C, K.551 -
"Jupiter"
English Chamber Orchestra/Jeffrey
Tate
EMI CZS 5 74185 2 [2
CDs, 67' 35", 66'
06"]
Crotchet
The andante of the G minor is among the finest I have heard. Based
almost entirely on repeated notes, this movement, even without repeats (as
here) can all too often seem an almighty long slog. Tate firstly avoids making
the repeated notes too detached, so there is the sense of a musical line,
and secondly allows us to perceive when the repeated notes are leading forward
to a climax, when they are winding down from one, and when they are marking
time as an accompanying figure. In this last case Tate reduces them to a
barely perceptible pulsation. The Menuetto also achieves a fine forward
impulse at a steady pace and the finale is among the few to make a
success of a slowish speed. With the string semi-quavers really enunciated
and a beautifully phrased second group the music is given a range of expression
we do not often hear. If I have left the first movement till last it is because,
though possessed of similar virtues, again at a steady tempo, I did feel
it could have done with a little more bite at times. Still, this is an important
version of the symphony.
I shall be less detailed with the others, because they differ less from what
we normally hear. Basically you will find interpretations which are broad
but energetic, beautifully phrased without any trace of mannerism, and above
all structural integrity. I felt that the Prague was a little less
inspired than the rest, with a first movement that sometimes lacks rhythmic
momentum (the tempo doesn't slacken but certain lyrical moments are so lacking
in accentuation that the music seems becalmed) and an andante which
is spelled out rather didactically, as could sometimes happen with the great
Otto Klemperer. For it is of Klemperer that these majestic interpretations
remind us more than any other.
The downsides of the Tate approach? Well, don't come to him for charm or
grace. And, while it is clear that he feels the music with great intensity,
you won't find the warmth and humanity of a Bruno Walter either. If you want
to hear the Jupiter conducted as though every theme represents a different
operatic character, listen to Eugen Jochum. Also, this is big band Mozart
even though the orchestra is the ECO (but the textures never become thick),
so those who have come to love period instruments in this music may not like
it much. Tate's firm grip on the proceedings means that individual instruments
are not invited to savour the timbre of their particular instruments during
solo passages, everything is conducted and this, as in certain Leinsdorf
performances, can lead to a slightly monochrome effect.
But those who stay away do so at their cost for Tate has something very special
to say about Mozart, above all in the G minor. The recording is suitable,
for it takes a slightly distant, mid-hall view rather than honing in on
individual instruments. The anonymous liner notes, in three languages, are
brief and would have been to the point had the G minor been conducted in
a more orthodox manner.
Christopher Howell