In November it was Bruckner’s Ninth that got double billing. First with the BRSO under Bernard Haitink (reviewed here), which was a ‘high-quality so-so’ experience, then with Kent Nagano and the Bavarian State Orchestra (November 29th / 30th). As a prelude for the unfinished Bruckner Symphony Nagano chose not the Te Deum (“Te Dium”, as I’ve seen a witty soul remark recently), but Stille & Umkehr (“Silence and Return”), the last orchestral work of Bernd Alois Zimmermann [read Alex Ross’ article on B. A. Zimmermann’s opera, “Die Soldaten”], composed shortly before the depressed composer committed suicide in 1970. It was this combination that convinced me, still flu-stricken, to attend rather than sip more tea at home. The reward was immense.
Zimmermann et al., "Who is afraid of 20th Century Music, I.Metzmacher / Hamburg Philharmonic EMI |
A.Bruckner, Symphony No.9, G.Wand / BPh RCA |
The applause after Zimmermann was very modest (Nagano hadn’t explained the programming choice yet), but the effect of Stille & Umkehr had yet to take place… and would. Between that particularly dark prelude, Nagano’s points about Death linking both works, and the interpretation itself, I had never heard Bruckner’s Ninth quite so. Not the opening with such obvious references to Mahler One, Beethoven Nine, Götterdämmerung; nor the whole symphony ever so dry, detailed, soft and unfazed…
Nagano imperceptibly built up a force that eventually unleashed itself upon the listener with unpitying force… unsentimental and gripping to the point of choking the listener. Not all was grim—the viola pizzicatos in the slow movement were downright saucy—but in the end this was otherworldly, overwhelming, with overtones of desolation, isolation... far removed from the cliché of Bruckner, the genial simpleton. “Space Music” is what another critic, similarly enthralled, said afterwards; an apt description of what turned out to be the finest, most intriguing of the “Academy Concerts” I have heard under Nagano.
No comments:
Post a Comment