Notes from the 2011 Salzburg Festival ( 20 )
Vienna Philharmonic 4 • Jansons, Lang Lang
Stravinsky & Prokofiev, 1947 Petrushka, Symphonic Dances, Jansons / RCO RCO Live Liszt, PC No.1 et al., Lang Lang / Gergiev / WPh Sony |
Liszt and Lang Lang both suffer from easy stereotyping. Glitz and flash on the outside, empty on the inside. These stereotypes don’t come from nowhere, and it would be futile—or at least obnoxiously pretentious—to argue that in truth the exact opposite where true. It isn’t. A lot (though certainly not all) of music of Liszt is pretty glitzy on the outside and not all that deep. And so is a lot (though certainly not all) of Lang Lang’s music-making. The curious result is that critics and snobs underrate Lang Lang severely, audiences overrate him. The same can’t quite be said for Liszt, because calling him a hit with audiences would be going rather too far. Curiously one of the most recorded composers, he’s hardly ever on the program… and when he is, it’s usually the Sonata in b-minor. Or, were it not for Nazi-appropriation, Les Preludes. But when has the Parsifal-heralding cantata The Bells of Strasbourg Cathedral been last performed? Or The much-better-than-its-nonexistent-reputation Legend of St. Elisabeth?
In any case, the stereotype, however understandable, does injustice to both, because for every two works or performances that support it, comes one that suffices to shatter it again. Would the combination of the two—in this concerto—bring out the best, or the worst of both? Not quite the best, perhaps, but more of the better ones, than the worst certainly. Having overstated dynamics certainly beats having carelessly muddled ones. Having a pianist so unfazed by any difficulties that he can still run a ring-a-ring-o' roses around the score gives him opportunity to care about expression beyond the notes—some of which Lang Lang put to good use. Seeing his fingers weaving their way across the keyboard with causal ease suggests they’re at least partially made of India rubber. And it’s good to hear some real pianissimo-playing, mannered or not. Was it still bold, thunderous, and flashy? Why yes, of course. It’s the Liszt Piano Concerto No.1!
I still don’t like a lot of his chair-dance antics while performing, the public emoting, but occasionally a physical gesture can illustrate, not obscure, the music behind it. The swift parting of hands after a soft run up the keyboard suggesting how the music dissipates like birds into the sounds of the orchestra that overtakes… was one, if perhaps singular, moment of the visual enhancing the audible. Overplayed La Valse, for all its charm, more and more strikes me as the we-can’t-think-of-anything-else-to-program piece. It didn’t rise to the full-blooded performance that "1947" Petrushka had bestowed upon it yet without being in any way bad: an aimless sort of excellence—not unlike the concert as a whole.