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Johannes
BRAHMS (1833-1897)
Symphony no. 4 in E minor op.98 [42:08]
Berlin Symphony
Orchestra/Günther Herbig
no rec. info, pub. 1982 BERLIN CLASSICS 0149192BC [42:08]
“Berlin Classics Basics” is the title of this series. If you’re a
new collector building up your basics then the iron-and-steel
construction depicted on the cover and the total absence
of notes about the composer and the music, let alone the
conductor and orchestra, is a reminder that the former German
Democratic Republic took a pretty Spartan view of what constituted
its citizens’ basic needs. And if it’s economy you’re after,
most records of this symphony have something extra, quite
often the entire Third Symphony.
Mature collectors will be happy to accept this as a reminder that,
in the faltering last years of one of Eastern Europe’s greyest
regimes, the music-making was of a high standard and Günther
Herbig was one of those who ensured that it was so. With
strong but unspectacular sound and unvarnished yet cohesive
playing, this is a forthright statement of Brahmsian basics.
Notoriously, Brahms himself walked out of a performance of one of
his symphonies under Hans Richter because the pulse was too
rigid. Herbig’s rendering of the “Andante moderato” shows
that steadiness does not have to mean rigidity. At 11:38
he is not Boult-fast (9:56) or even Klemperer-fast (10:19),
but nor is his a Janowski-plod (12:37). A metronome would
probably reveal that there is little tempo variation from
beginning to end, yet the long arching phrasing carries the
ear over the bar-lines. The balance between deep inner expression
and onward surge is finely judged. Similarly, in the finale,
I don’t think I’ve ever heard the opening variations all
made to go at such a precisely even tempo, but the effect
is again not rigid. Herbig really makes each one grow out
of the other.
In between these comes a trenchant scherzo, energetic but with time
for the more graceful moments. The first movement has both
onward impetus and imposing grandeur. Other performances
may be more tragic, impassioned, heroic or what you will.
This one has an impressive ring of truth.
Günther Herbig was born in 1931 at Ustí nad Labem (now in the Czech
Republic) and studied with Abendroth in Weimar. In the early
sixties he studied further with Scherchen, (Arvid) Jansons
and Karajan. He was assistant to Kurt Sanderling with the
Berlin Symphony Orchestra from 1966 to 1972, when he succeeded
Kurt Masur as chief conductor and artistic director of the
Dresden Philharmonic Orchestra. He was the natural person
to succeed Sanderling on his retirement from the Berlin Symphony
Orchestra in 1977 but fairly soon left them to make his career
in the west. Apart from a brief spell with the BBC Philharmonic
in Manchester he has been mainly based in the United States
(Dallas, Detroit) and Canada (Toronto). Now in his later
seventies, as far as I can tell from the not always concordant
information in internet, he no longer holds a permanent position
but still makes frequent guest appearances. He set down all
four Brahms symphonies during his tenure with the Berlin
Symphony; possibly it would have been more imaginative of
Berlin Classics to reissue them as a set, hopefully not spread
over four CDs. On the strength of this example it would be
rewarding.
I must say that I have not particularly investigated Herbig’s art
and if this disc had been played to me blind I think I might
have suggested Sanderling as the conductor. By this I do
not mean to imply that his years as Sanderling’s assistant
made him a Sanderling clone. Rather, that he shares Sanderling’s
predilection for a big-boned, stern but impassioned approach.
Certainly, if you fancy the sort of performance Klemperer
might have been expected to give – the ones he really did
give were rather different – then you should find this very
satisfying.
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