Mahler: Blumine
Mahler: Five Songs on
Texts of Friedrich Rückert
Shostakovich: Symphony
No. 10 in E minor, Op. 93
In yet
another absorbing union of seemingly disparate
elements, Christoph Eschenbach found immense
stores of loneliness in the riotous Shostakovich
Tenth Symphony, linking it to Mahler’s
gently austere Rückert Lieder.
Although the two composers could not be more
different, they share a sense of being outsiders
– of not fitting in – and Eschenbach’s illumination
of these qualities in each work was telling.
Matthias
Goerne was in eerily thoughtful form for the
Rückert Lieder, carefully shaping
Mahler’s gorgeous phrases and offering soul-stirring
tone. In Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen
(I Have Lost Track of the World), Goerne’s
expertly discreet dimuendo on Es
ist mir auch gar nichts daran gelegen, ob
sie mich für gestorben halt (And for
me it is of no concern at all if it treats
me as dead), made him seem dwarfed by
humanity, like a tiny person set adrift on
an enormous iceberg. And if on the first night
the orchestral accompaniment seemed a bit
hesitant, the second night offered no such
anxiety (one of the advantages of hearing
a concert twice). To close the cycle, Goerne
did a strong and starkly effective Um Mitternacht
(At Midnight) with its spare orchestration.
Many
people think the Tenth is Shostakovich’s
greatest symphony, and in performances like
these one might think so, its vast structures
alternately moving and thrilling. (One friend
mused if John Williams might have been inspired
by this piece for his score to Raiders
of the Lost Ark.) In the opening, I loved
the way Philadelphia’s low strings rumbled
and murmured, eventually giving way to the
first outcry from the orchestra’s terrific
trombones.
The
violent Allegro, which Eschenbach launched
not quite as blisteringly fast as Antonio
Pappano did with the New York Philharmonic
a few weeks ago, nevertheless still made my
heart catch in my throat. The impact of this
movement can be quite physical, with the orchestra
racing along like a demon and each section
in piercing interplay with the others. If
these four minutes are widely considered to
be a portrait of Stalin, Eschenbach’s podium
posture only helped, with his arms darting
toward the violins, urging them to make ferociously
stabbing accents, and on the last note suddenly
folding his arms rigid, straight down at his
sides.
Eschenbach
seemed to point to the quizzical, aching third
movement as the symphony’s core, despite the
hyperactive passages in the movements on either
side of it. Although lots of snarling and
nervousness surround the despair, somehow
the poignant moments emerged as the most prominent.
Some heavenly solo work also helped Eschenbach’s
ideas spring to life, such as concertmaster
David Kim’s final short, almost out-of-breath
phrases, tossed out as if sarcasm and energy
were waning. The percussion work was also
expertly articulated, especially by Angela
Zator Nelson whose gentle tam-tam strokes
only increased the forlorn atmosphere.
In the
final movement, the composer’s musical signature,
D-E-flat-C-B, peppers the landscape
seemingly over and over, and late in the game
following a reprise of some of the blood-pumping
music from the Allegro, the entire
orchestra loudly hammers it out in unison,
as if to silence all argument. Eschenbach
underlined the phrase by slowing down dramatically,
and the phrase was capped with yet another
gorgeous crash on that gong. Others may like
this motif presented "straight"
(i.e., in tempo) and I generally do, too –
but Eschenbach’s emphatic approach worked
just fine. All praise, too, to the orchestra’s
clarinet, and the bassoons, which introduced
the final dazzling pages with fountains of
forced jollity.
The
concert opened with Blumine, originally
designed as the second movement of Mahler’s
First Symphony, and what a lovely piece
this is. The notes indicated that it had not
been performed in Philadelphia since 1983
– perhaps a bit shocking since its eight minutes,
with Mahler at his most intimate, are easy
to enjoy. David Bilgers played its key trumpet
solo with pastoral serenity, his tone hovering
sweetly above the ensemble. Speaking (uninvited)
for the concert-going public, twenty-one years
would seem to be far too long to wait for
this tiny enchantment.
Bruce Hodges