Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde.
Sarah Connolly, mezzo-soprano; Toby Spence, tenor; London Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin. LPO. $16.99.
Mahler: Lieder aus “Des Knaben
Wunderhorn”; Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen; Wolfgang Rihm: Rainer Maria
Rilke—4 Gedichte für Singstimme & Orchester.
Christoph Prégardien, tenor;
Bochumer Symphoniker conducted by Steven Sloane. CPO. $16.99.
Mahler: Symphony No. 6.
Dallas Symphony Orchestra conducted by Jaap van Zweden. DSO Live. $16.99.
Gustav Mahler died at age
50, seven weeks before his 51st birthday, a fact that makes his
splendid musical output – not to mention his tremendous accomplishments as a
conductor and arranger – all the more remarkable. There are not very many
Mahler works, but most of those he created have become so much a part of the
standard repertoire that it is hard to realize how rarely heard they were as
recently as the 1960s. Practically every conductor on the world stage now
essays a Mahler symphony cycle, or at least dips into the composer’s work with
an eye toward saying something new about it – the latter task made possible by
the fact that there is so much packed into the composer’s powerful, large-scale
compositions. It might be questioned whether Yannick Nézet-Séguin (born
1975) has the emotional maturity for Das
Lied von der Erde: Mahler was only 48 when he wrote it but was already
aware of the heart disease that would soon claim his life, and in many ways was
old beyond his years. But Nézet-Séguin’s live February 2011
performance, newly released on the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s own label,
shows sure-handedness in the conducting and a fine sense of the structure and
symphonic layout of this hybrid work (part symphony, part oratorio, part song
cycle). Nézet-Séguin shapes the six individual
sections carefully, bringing out both the work’s flowing lines and its jagged
elements. And the orchestra plays with warmth and all the understanding
befitting music with which major ensembles worldwide are now thoroughly
familiar. The soloists are fine, showing emotional involvement in the music and
singing their contrasting sections feelingly. Sarah Connolly is the better of
the two, with a smooth, warm voice that nicely picks out the many chinoiserie elements of her first two
songs and then progresses with considerable depth into Der Abschied (in which, however, she loses the forward impetus from
time to time). Toby Spence has more enthusiasm than technique: he tends to
sound shrill, especially in his high register, and is actually harsh at the
beginning of Das Trinklied von Jammer der
Erde, although he soon rights himself. As a whole, this is a
more-than-creditable performance that shows Nézet-Séguin to
have considerable Mahler ability – which will no doubt develop over time as he
delves more fully into the composer’s oeuvre.
For a much better sense of
Mahler’s vocal possibilities, an excellently sung CD featuring tenor Christoph
Prégardien offers a daring
program combining six selections from Des
Knaben Wunderhorn (including Urlicht,
which is usually heard only in the Second Symphony) with the four-song cycle Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen and four
songs by Wolfgang Rihm. The juxtaposition of Mahler’s orchestral songs with
Rihm’s – indeed, with anybody else’s – is highly unusual, and it is only to be
expected that the non-Mahler songs will pale in comparison to Mahler’s. But
something else happens on this fine CPO disc. Even though Des Knaben Wunderhorn is mostly early Mahler, some of the settings
have many forward-looking elements – and when Urlicht ends and the CD proceeds immediately to the Rihm songs,
which are placed between the two Mahler sequences, Mahler’s stretching of
tonality and his very personal use of the human voice come into sharper focus. The
Rihm songs, remarkably, end up shining considerable light on Mahler’s – and when,
after the Rihm sequence (which dates to 2000-04), Prégardien begins Lieder
eines fahrenden Gesellen, Mahler’s first song cycle (1884-85), both the
contrast and the comparable elements are striking. Steven Sloane’s highly
sensitive conducting, and the excellent playing of the Bochumer Symphoniker,
have a great deal to do with this disc’s success, but Prégardien’s handling of the vocal elements is the primary factor.
Prégardien is as comfortable
with the Aesopian satire of Lob des hohen
Verstandes and the delicacy of Wer
hat dies Liedlein erdacht (despite some slight breath-control issues) as
with the intensity of Ich hab’ ein glühend
Messer (which gets a particularly striking reading). And Prégardien, to whom Rihm dedicated the
voice-and-piano version of the Rilke songs and who gave the first performance of
them in their voice-and-orchestra form, handles the spare aesthetics of Rihm –
which well match Rilke’s complexly knotted thoughts – as well as he manages
Mahler’s broader, deeper and more emotionally intense music. Mahler’s music
generally does not mix particularly well with anyone else’s, but the
juxtaposition of Mahler and Rihm on this CD is surprisingly revelatory.
Revelations are harder to
come by in the Dallas Symphony Orchestra recording of the Sixth Symphony on the
orchestra’s own label. The problem with Mahler as a fixture of modern concerts
is that the familiarity of the music can all too easily lead to pedestrian
performances. Jaap van Zweden’s is better than that, but it is scarcely
inspired. For every very fine touch (the intensity of the first hammer blow in
the finale, for example), there is something that does not quite measure up (e.g., the bland handling of the main
march rhythm of the first movement). The Dallas ensemble is a good orchestra
but not a great one: it can handle Mahler, but the strain tends to show, most
noticeably in the brass. Van Zweden’s interpretation is short on emotional
punch: the entire first movement lacks a strong and effective contrast between
the march elements and the beautiful theme representing Mahler’s wife, Alma;
and it feels less propulsive than it should for maximum effect. The Scherzo is
all right but, again, not as intense as it can be; as a result, the slow
movement, although very beautifully played, provides less of a contrast than it
ideally should. And while van Zweden gets the scale of the finale right, he
does not hold it together particularly well: the dark elements (except for that
first hammer blow, which is much stronger than the second – van Zweden omits
the third) evoke more pathos than tragedy. There is nothing major wrong with
this (+++) performance, and music lovers who have heard the Dallas Symphony in
concert may even consider it a worthy souvenir of the orchestra. But just as
there are plenty of adequate-but-ordinary performances of the masterpieces of
Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms and other standard-repertoire symphonists, so there
are nowadays of Mahler. This Sixth is fine, but ultimately not nearly as
special as Mahler can be.
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