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SEEN AND HEARD CONCERT REVIEW
Mahler:
London Symphony
Orchestra, Valery Gergiev (conductor). Barbican Hall, London, 5.6.2008 (MB)
Mahler – Symphony
no.10 in F sharp major: Adagio
Mahler – Symphony no.9
‘Gergiev’s Mahler’ has raised more than a few critical hackles. I had only
attended one concert previous to this, that of the
Seventh, and, given the general reception awarded to earlier performances,
had found it rather better than expected. I should in no sense have described
it as a great performance, but it signified a considered, if still evolving,
interpretation. Would that I could say the same of these performances.
I shall admit that I am yet to be convinced of the validity nowadays of
presenting the Adagio from the Tenth Symphony by itself. One can
present just about any movement by itself if one wishes, but it does not
necessarily make for satisfying listening. Now that we know at the very least
Mahler’s conception for the rest of the symphony, it seems odd that many
conductors who appear, for instance, to have no difficulty in conducting
Mozart’s Requiem, in whatever completion, still baulk at performing this far
more ‘completed’ work. That terrible cataclysmic dissonance towards the end of
the Adagio needs to be resolved, but will only achieve resolution in
the symphony’s final movement. It can, I suppose, be left hanging
prophetically, but one might say the same of many symphonic first movements.
Or it might be underplayed, so as to permit some sort of scaled-down
resolution within the Adagio. If I were to be excessively charitable, I
might possibly entertain the proposition that this is what happened in
Gergiev’s performance; I fear, however, that I should be clutching at some
very thin straws indeed. The climax never came, which was emphatically not the
fault of the trumpeter, who performed impeccably. He utterly lacked support
and the performance utterly lacked terror. In a generally disappointing
Adagio-only performance a few years ago at the Proms, Pierre Boulez had at
least managed that. At any rate, the Barbican performance left nothing to be
resolved, so the problem vanished into thin air. Nor had the rest of this
reading been stronger. The opening, Parsifalian viola line was assiduously
micro-managed; one could see and hear this. Here and upon any of its
reprises – including that on the violins towards the very end – it was
laboriously shaped rather than sinuously sung. The balance was often very odd,
especially when brass entries overpowered the strings: quite an achievement in
so string-saturated a movement. This was less of a problem when the
Hauptstimme fell to the horns but, in general, it did not even sound
perverse, merely careless. There were a couple of incidents of positive note.
Guest leader, Anton Barakhovsky’s solos were taken exquisitely, here and
elsewhere. There was a telling febrile intensity, almost Webern-like, to the
violins, as they prepared the way for the would-be chords of terror. That,
however, was about it. I was about to say that we should have been thankful
for Gergiev’s fastish tempo, in that the performance finished sooner than
would usually have been the case, but I suspect that this made little
difference in practice.
The Andante comodo of the Ninth opened hesitantly: not, it seemed, a
hesitancy born of interpretative choice, but merely out of unsteadiness.
Matters did not improve when Gergiev yet again
resorted to fussy and arbitrary moulding of lines. Balances were once again
odd too: whether by design or omission was difficult
to tell. The movement was often extremely rushed; the climaxes in particular
were never given time to tell. There was little sense of the movement’s
architecture and the brass sounded as if they were
playing Shostakovich rather than Mahler. This was a characterisation I had
resisted during the earlier performance of the Seventh, suspecting that it
would lazily have relied upon the cliché of an almost-Russian conductor
understanding too much through the prism of the Soviet composer. Here,
however, it was almost impossible to overlook. Military marches made their
presence felt in quite the ‘wrong’ sort of sense: merely cheap rather than
ironically so. For me at least, Mahler cannot now fail to be understood in
terms of his legacy to the Second Viennese School and
indeed to its successors. This is what continues to inspire in his
music, not occasional correspondences with the dead end of ‘socialist
realism’. As Boulez remarked in 2000: ‘Well,
Shostakovich plays with clichés most of the time, I find. It's like olive oil,
when you have a second and even third pressing, and I think of Shostakovich as
the second, or even third, pressing of Mahler.’ On account
of all of the above, what has often with good reason been
reckoned as Mahler’s single greatest movement – I feel that I should
attach ‘allegedly’ to the word comodo – felt tediously extended, again
despite its sometimes frenetic pace.
The second movement started more promisingly, with the second violins really
digging into their strings. Gergiev’s antiphonal division of the violins
certainly paid off here. I initially thought there was a splendid sense of
rhythm; this soon, however, became rigid in a fashion utterly inimical to
Mahler and more akin to the worst of Toscanini’s Beethoven. There was
something unpleasantly and indiscriminately aggressive to the entire movement,
when a Ländler should surely be the most yielding of dances. Once
again, I began to suspect a Shostakovich-inspired parody of Mahler.
The Rondo-Burleske came off better, perhaps because the general
approach was more suited to this particular movement; what had seemed brazenly
inappropriate was not necessarily so here. Even the shriekingly militaristic
piccolo and percussion were not entirely out of place. Biting counterpoint was
well projected, with a welcome note of sarcasm, and for perhaps the only time
in the entire concert, there was a hint of new metaphysical vistas opening up
during the middle section: a frustrating hint of what might have been. The
harps sounded gorgeous and added suspense, as did shimmering violins. Even the
helter-skelter rush at the end did not matter too much.
Then, however, we reverted to the bad old story. Indeed, the opening line
exhibited precisely the same fussy micro-management that the Tenth had.
The strings as a whole exhibited a good, full tone, securely underpinned by
splendid double-basses, but then the principal horn entered, bringing with him
the air of another planet, albeit that of DSCH rather than ASCH. The horn
player in question was none other than David Pyatt, who has few if any rivals
in the world today, whether technically or musically, so I can only assume
that his brazen entry was a case of following orders. I have certainly never
heard him play with such Russian-sounding vibrato – and yes, I tried to resist
the cliché but this is genuinely what I heard. Some of the high violin lines
might have been from Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk; there was not the
slightest hint of standing only a stone’s throw, if that, from Berg. Gergiev’s
direction was urgent in the wrong sense; in fact, it was simply hard-driven.
He seemed to have forgotten that this was an Adagio; at times, it
seemed barely to be an Andante. Had it not been – thankfully – for the
strings’ vibrato, I might have wondered whether the spirit of Roger Norrington
had taken possession of the conductor’s body. This was, I think, less a matter
of tempo as such, although that played its part, as of a strange reluctance to
yield. At any rate, I found myself saying under my breath: ‘Come back Leonard
Bernstein. All, and I mean all, is forgiven!’ A couple of the climaxes were at
last a little more yielding; yet by now, this merely sounded arbitrary,
unmotivated by anything that had preceded them. The movement drifted on to its
conclusion. Despite some beautifully hushed string playing, it was all too
late; nothing could have salvaged this performance. Much of the audience
appeared to differ, waiting for a considerable number of seconds in silence,
albeit a silence punctuated by a generous number of coughs, as Gergiev’s hands
remained frozen in mid-air. This seemed as arbitrary as the climaxes. As
members of the audience stood to applaud, I resolved that it was high time to
leave the hall, resorting to memories of Sir Simon Rattle’s great performance
of this great work with the very same orchestra in 2000. I realised that, on
the present occasion, not once, during a performance of Mahler’s Ninth
Symphony and part of his Tenth, had I been moved. There had clearly been
something very wrong either with the performance or with me.
Mark Berry
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