Blomstedt Brings Bruckner to the NSO
Many thanks to Robert R. Reilly for contributing his sympathetic Bruckner-ears’ expertise to ionarts with this review of the National Symphony Orchestra.
Blomstedt took a mellow, unhurried, but still alert approach to the Mozart. At first, his young partner, 28-year-old pianist Jonathan Biss, seemed to rush rather than relish his part. This abated by the end of the first movement and a new level of comfort showed itself in the Larghetto, without, albeit, revealing any notable poetic insights. In the last movement, Allegro, Biss showed some real character and esprit. Clearly, he was now relaxed enough to begin exploring, with his ample talent, the expressive possibilities Mozart offered. By far his best movement, he began relishing the interplay with the orchestra and displaying the sense of play essential to Mozart. Now that Biss has broken the ice, my guess is that his next two performances (today and tomorrow) will be up to the par of the last movement tonight, which would make them rather special.
This was the second Bruckner 9th (always only the first three extant movements, omitting the unfinished fourth as remains predominant practice) that I have heard in less than three weeks. On March 3rd, I heard Zubin Mehta direct the Vienna Philharmonic in Los Angeles in a disappointing performance that seemed to use the 9th as a virtuoso display piece for the orchestra, rather than as Bruckner’s final statement on the cosmos. The NSO was not in a position to do that, nor did Herbert Blomstedt seem to be disposed to want to. His intentions were more serious. And, truth be told, the NSO was not exactly in its métier. It has not performed this symphony in 20 years. [The last—and only?—time we covered the NSO in Bruckner was a little less than four years ago, when Roger Norrington inflicted the original version of the Fourth without vibrato upon us. jfl] At times, it sounded as if it were speaking a second language that it had not quite mastered; there was a momentary discombobulation in one of the many gear shifts in the first movement, and occasional odd sound balances occurred.
Anne Midgette, Bruckner Blossoms Under Blomstedt and NSO (Washington Post, March 20) Inside the NSO: A Rehearsal of Bruckner’s Symphony No. 9 (RealPlayer video) |
Aesthetic postscripts: The VPO has better tailors than the NSO and looks stunning in white tie. Compared to the VPO, which had only four female participants, the NSO looks like a gynecocracy. I only mention this because it struck me, as I was once struck with the nearly overwhelming green of Virginia after coming back from three months in the desert in the Middle East. While I expected lax sartorial standards in the Disney Concert Hall, which invites by its name and design perpetual adolescence, I saw elderly adults in blue jeans at the Kennedy Center Bruckner concert here. Unless this is part of a new WPA program for the Great Recession, that really seems inexcusable. RRR
This concert repeats tonight and tomorrow night (March 20 and 21, 8 pm). Pianist Jonathan Biss will give a solo recital in the area next month, playing music by Mozart, Schubert, Chopin, and Kurtág at the Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington (April 5, 7:30 pm). The next performances by the NSO will be the Holy Week concerts (April 9 to 11), with Kurt Masur conducting the Brahms German Requiem, featuring Heidi Grant Murphy and one of the final performances of the soon-to-be-defunct Master Chorale of Washington.