Any chance to hear Mahler's ninth symphony live and played reasonably well, as it was on Saturday, is worth the effort. The work, completed in the last couple years of the composer's life and not premiered until 1912, after he died, is often described as pervaded by Mahler's fear of his own impending death. Mahler scholar Henry-Louis de La Grange notes that Mahler "was then forty-nine years old and more active than ever. Each year he crossed the Atlantic to conduct long seasons of operas and concerts in the United States." While "there is no denying that [...] the Ninth Symphony was written in the shadow of death," it was more the recent death of the composer's four-year-old daughter than the "serious -- if not fatal -- heart condition" that troubled Mahler's serenity. It was none other than Bernstein who popularized the association of the uneven motif that opens the ninth symphony with the sound of Mahler's irregular heartbeat, something that Charles Amenta (an M.D.) has examined and supported in an article (The Opening of the Mahler Ninth Symphony and the Bernstein “Heart-Beat” Hypothesis, .PDF file).
Mahler, Symphony No. 9: Dresden Staatskapelle, G. Sinopoli (live recording, 1997) Berlin Philharmonic, S. Rattle (live recording, 2007) |
As Sinopoli put it, to commemorate the 450th anniversary of the Dresden Staatskapelle, this orchestra is not necessarily known for "dominant power and dazzling virtuosity," instead having "a tradition of heartfelt human expression." That is what makes this recording so pleasurable, whereas Simon Rattle's more recent take on the ninth with the Berlin Philharmonic is all bristle, edge, and hurry. The timings -- not always a reliable indication, true -- are in this case indicative, shorter than Sinopoli by a minute or two in the inner movements and by more in the outer ones (over three minutes in the fourth and five minutes in the first). The Berlin sound, all that gleam and muscle, is recorded in intense, close sound, but it sounds a little unreflective to my ears.
Tim Smith, Alsop, BSO reach eloquent heights in Mahler's Ninth Symphony (Clef Notes, April 6) Anne Midgette, BSO, Strong on Style but Not Passion (Washington Post, April 6) Erik Wemple, What Did Midgette Say About the BSO? (City Desk, April 7) T. L. Ponick, BSO Masters Mahler (Washington Times, April 6) |
The fourth movement did not feel rushed as much as soupy, with emoted gestures from Alsop, who laid it on pretty thick. It suggested a conclusion that was superficially sad, rather than a deep tragedy welling up from within. La Grange notes that the principal theme sounds like a hymn, and others have suggested that it could have been modeled on Nearer My God to Thee or another hymn that Mahler may have heard in New York. The best interpretation, like Sinopoli's, lets the thread of grief pull itself from the spool at its own pace, until the almost voiceless quotation or allusion to Kindertotenlieder near the end. In spite of these shortcomings, the playing of the BSO continues to improve, with spartan brass throughout, especially in the horn section, and fine winds, especially the double reeds. While it was not a Mahler ninth for the ages, it was, as always, good to hear this glorious work in concert.
Next week the BSO and Marin Alsop will present a program combining Aaron Copland's third symphony and Bruch's first violin concerto (April 16 to 18), with concertmaster Jonathan Carney. This program will be performed exclusively in Baltimore, with no appearance at Strathmore.
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