During the 2012 Edinburgh Festival, Valery Gergiev
brought the LSO for a four-night residency at the Usher Hall, during
which he played the complete symphonies of Brahms and Szymanowski, plus
a few other works by both composers. I thought at the time that the
pairing of the two composers was misguided and unrevealing, and most
of the Szymanowski works meant absolutely nothing to me. I remember
enjoying the Brahms very much, though. It felt like a proper event having
the complete Brahms symphonies played by the London Symphony Orchestra
with their principal conductor over four consecutive nights, and it
was a festival highlight for me that year. Gergiev later did the same
programmes in London, and it is from those Barbican concerts that we
have these CDs. Nos. 3 and 4 are to follow.
After my good Edinburgh experience I came to these discs with high levels
of anticipation, and lots of things are very good. However, maybe I’m
misremembering the excitement of the concerts, or maybe Gergiev’s
interpretation changed during the journey from Edinburgh to London,
but I found his take on the First Symphony inconsistent and rather frustrating.
Many of the problems spring from his timings, which are infuriatingly
fluid and eccentric at times. He begins well, getting the
poco sostenuto
just about right, slower than some of the fleet-footed performances
that have come into vogue recently but marginally more pacy than the
cast-iron tread of, say, Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic whose 1977
performance nevertheless remains my favourite one of this work. Sadly,
too much of the ensuing
allegro fails to hang together because
the tempo relations don’t work. It begins fairly sluggishly so
that the listener is not caught by the drive of initial excitement,
and the conclusion of the first subject is too self-consciously
pesante,
as if Gergiev were conducting with a mallet, while the second subject
slows up far too much, ruining the flow; there’s a case for this
but to my ears Gergiev takes it too far. The ensuing triplet theme works
better and the great string theme that broadens out in the development
sounds very impressive on the LSO violins, but the huge rhythmic chords
at the end of the development sounded uncontrolled and undisciplined.
The
Andante was also too slow for my taste, and a bit indulgent
in the way Gergiev seems to milk the string sound, though the LSO winds
do, at least, have a gorgeously autumnal quality to their sound. Only
in the third movement does Gergiev begin to let himself go and allow
the music to breathe naturally. This spills over into the start of the
finale, whose dark, searching quality Gergiev finds rather successfully,
dispelled by a superbly played horn solo - and every bit as impressive
is the shimmery halo of violin sound that surrounds it. The brass chorale
also sounds great and there is a richness to the big string theme that
is very satisfying. The ensuing development has a lot more pace about
it, as well as a consistency of argument that was missing from earlier.
Gergiev’s skills at building a climax are demonstrated ably in
this section, even if they desert him somewhat in the recapitulation,
which feels rather formulaic and “by numbers.” However,
when the trombones begin to take the lead in the coda a new majesty
takes grip, partly because Gergiev refuses to speed up too much and
maintains an impressive level of control. The ending is, therefore,
very good, but it points up just how inconsistent a reading of the symphony
this is. Parts are very satisfying, but it just doesn’t hang together
as a whole. I wish Gergiev had applied himself more consistently throughout
the work.
The second symphony convinced me more. Gergiev keeps the tempi moving
in all four movements, and the first movement in particular has a fitting
sense of flow to it. One section moves seamlessly into another, avoiding
the choppy and inconsistent feeling of the first movement of No. 1.
He is expansive in the second movement, without wallowing, and he controls
the central section, with its threats of danger, with impressive strength.
He treats the Allegretto with an appropriately light touch and taps
into the energy of the finale without sounding reckless. If the winds
impressed me most in the first symphony then it was the strings that
were particularly fine in No. 2. The middle strings, in particular,
sound fantastic at the second subject of the first movement, or the
opening theme of the Adagio. The violins are sunny in the Allegretto,
clipped and precise in the finale, and there is a communal sense of
coming together here to cross the finishing line in style.
The fillers are pretty good too. The
Tragic Overture is suitably
brooding, with a brilliant opening and a sweepingly impressive second
subject. The central section has a searching, uncertain quality to it,
and there is an impressively irrevocable quality to the final bars.
The
Haydn Variations are on the nippy side, but there's nothing
wrong with that in itself, and at least here it is followed through
consistently with tempi that appear to make sense in relation to one
another. The
Vivace fifth variation, for example, dances
all the more convincingly after the slower
Andante con moto that
precedes it. There is a pleasing legato feel to Gergiev's reading
too, most notably (comically?) with the horns at the outset of the sixth
variation, but it works very well for the theme itself and the swelling
violin climax of the
Grazioso seventh variation is enchanting.
All told, then, this isn’t a bad set, and parts of it are very
good. What a shame that the first symphony wasn’t more consistent!
Unfortunately, that makes this pairing pale next to the classic interpretations,
such as Karajan’s or Szell’s, many of which are now available
at budget price, just like this issue. Maybe Gergiev’s third and
fourth will turn out better.
Simon Thompson
Maybe Gergiev’s third and fourth will turn out better.
Masterwork Index: Brahms
Symphony
1 ~~
Symphony 2