Bruckner: Symphony No. 4. Symphonieorchester des
Bayerischen Rundfunks conducted by Mariss Jansons. BR Klassik. $16.99.
The death of any great conductor becomes
an invitation to examine or re-examine his legacy and the reasons he was held
in high regard – and the passing of Mariss Jansons (1943-2019) is no exception
to that rule. Jansons is usually spoken of as being Latvian, and Latvia takes
an understandable pride in his reputation and accomplishments, but in fact he
was born when Latvia was under German occupation – and his mother, who was
Jewish and whose father and brother died at the Nazis’ hands, gave birth to him
in secret. Yet Jansons came to the joys of music pretty much from (and despite)
his birth in those awful circumstances: his mother, Iraida, was a singer at the
Riga Opera, and his father, Arvïds, conducted the opera orchestra.
Mariss Jansons gained a worldwide
reputation as music director of orchestras in both Europe and the United
States: the Oslo Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Pittsburgh
Symphony – and, from 2003 until his death, the Symphonieorchester des
Bayerischen Rundfunks. He had the advantage with this last-named ensemble of
being able to rely at all times on perfection of playing, excellence of sound,
and clarity of line – characteristics for which the Symphonieorchester des
Bayerischen Rundfunks is justly renowned. This gave Jansons plenty of
opportunities to focus on the details of interpretation of the sumptuous music
of composers to whose works he especially gravitated, including Tchaikovsky,
Rachmaninoff, Shostakovich, Richard Strauss, and Mahler. Jansons was not quite so
closely identified with Bruckner, but a new BR Klassik reissue of a 2008 live
recording of Bruckner’s Symphony No. 4, a work that the composer himself dubbed
“Romantic,” clearly shows how skillfully and convincingly Jansons could handle
Bruckner’s music when he did perform it.
The wonderful sound of the orchestra is a
given here, and the passion of the performance – the first movement, for
example, has a feeling both of propulsiveness and of upward striving – is
characteristic of Jansons. So is the elegant way in which Jansons, in that same
movement, allows the music a relaxed, pastoral feeling that is coupled with
forward motion: the movement becomes a pleasant walk through the countryside,
the repeated horn calls keeping the atmosphere clear while Jansons pays careful
attention to the tempo designation of Bewegt,
nicht zu schnell (“emotional, not too fast”).
The second movement here retains some
characteristics of the pacing of the first, and indeed has a tempo indication
that invites comparison: Andante quasi
Allegretto. The pairing of these movements, in which the differing tempos
and thematic materials are nevertheless closely related, is reminiscent of the
situation in the first and second movements of Symphony No. 8 (“Unfinished”) by
Schubert, who was a significant influence on Bruckner. Jansons maintains the
emotional level of the first movement throughout the second, and the feeling of
a rather meandering country walk remains as well, helped by the clarity of pizzicato strings. The scene painting is
not as overt as in, say, the second movement of Beethoven’s “Pastorale”
symphony or the first movement of Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 – but Jansons evokes
a definite sense of the outdoors, of nature and birdsong and expansiveness, and
in so doing makes the “Romantic” designation of the symphony seem particularly
well-suited to the music.
Jansons’ interpretation allows the second
movement to pave the way clearly for the third movement’s “hunting” motif – and
at the same time, Jansons’ pacing draws attention to the fact that all four of
the symphony’s movements are intended to be moderately paced. The nicht zu schnell phrase from the first movement
appears again for the Trio of the third, which here sounds very pastoral
indeed, and the same phrase is there yet again for the finale. The second
movement’s Italian tempo designation amounts to more or less the same thing.
This pacing plan can be a challenge for a conductor, since it does not allow
substantial tempo-based contrasts among the movements. Nor is the work’s
emotionalism ever supposed to flag: again, the word Bewegt appears in the first, third and fourth movements. Jansons
takes this instruction literally, ensuring that there is an emotional core to
the individual movements as well as to the symphony as a whole. The result is a
performance that pulls listeners into Bruckner’s sound world at the start and
holds them there, gently but firmly, throughout the symphony.
The fourth movement here becomes a
summation as well as a capstone: it communicates the feelings already brought
forth in the first three, building imposingly on them while Jansons remains in
touch with the mainly relaxed mood that he has built up and sustained
throughout the performance. There is warmth and beauty aplenty here, and the
contrast between the massed sound of the full orchestra and the clarity of
individual sections is especially welcome. The romanticism in this finale is
not overdone or overemphasized, but is pervasive in a kind of scene-setting that
gives the audience a wholly satisfactory conclusion of their visit to a world
whose emotionalism flows from within to be reflected externally, ending in a
sonically resplendent conclusion. Like other recordings by Jansons, this one
leaves the impression of a conductor who, through his complete and careful
immersion in the music, pulls the audience wholly into it as well. Also like
other Jansons recordings, this one is highly worthy in and of itself – and also
as a part of the conductor’s very distinguished legacy.
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