Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4. Wiener Symphoniker
conducted by Philippe Jordan. Wiener Symphoniker. $49.99 (4 CDs).
Conductors face a problem when approaching
the most-canonical works in the classical canon: there may well seem to be
nothing to say about them, musically, that has not been said before. In fact,
even the decision to release a new recording of thrice-familiar music can be a
difficult one, since potential purchasers will almost surely own favored
recordings of the music already and will not necessarily be disposed to acquire
a new version that perhaps differs from others only in a few minor details. Happily,
these risks did not dissuade the producers of the new release of Brahms’
symphonies on the Wiener Symphoniker’s own label, featuring live recordings of
the orchestra conducted by Philippe Jordan – because it turns out that Jordan
does have a number of ideas about these works that, if not exactly new, are
unusual, and result in a set of readings that are worth considering even by
listeners who already own one or several versions of the Brahms cycle.
One noteworthy feature here is that the
recording was made in Vienna’s Musikverein building, where two of the
symphonies, Nos. 2 and 3, received their world première performances; Nos. 1
and 4 were also played in the venue shortly after their debuts elsewhere.
Acoustically speaking, the music “fits” the hall beautifully; and while, of
course, no current member of the orchestra was born when these works were first
heard, the ensemble does have a characteristic sound dating back to Brahms’
time – a sound that the Wiener Symphoniker has been at pains to preserve
through all the years and all the turmoil since the Romantic era.
Jordan himself, the orchestra’s music
director from 2014 to 2020, honed what was already a remarkably rich and
precise orchestral sound even further, and these recordings from 2019 showcase
the beauty, elegance, and superb sectional balance of the orchestra, along with
the soloist-quality playing of section principals.
The sonic environment and exceptional
playing are not, however, all that distinguish this Brahms cycle from others,
and indeed would not be enough in themselves to make this release as successful
as it is. What is so outstanding here is the way Jordan finds that the Brahms
symphonies, in spite of their status as works that are heard nearly ad infinitum (some would cynically say ad nauseam), have meanings that have not
been fully plumbed: they still have things to communicate, sources of pleasure
and trenchant emotional connection, that can be brought out in unexpected ways.
That is just what Jordan does. He does so
most clearly by avoiding the now-traditional massed and massive “Brahms sound”
that so many conductors actively seek, a sound that can be enormously
impressive but that can all too easily become clotted and turgid. Jordan
insists on a level of clarity that Brahms’ symphonies rarely receive: not only
the principal themes but also the subsidiary ones, and the middle voices, come
through clearly in these readings, sharpening the works’ focus and allowing use
of the wonderful sectional balance of the Wiener Symphoniker to the best
possible effect. In addition, Jordan looks in all these symphonies for the
songful elements as a balance for the dramatic ones: Brahms is not often
thought of as having a “singing” quality in his orchestral music, but he does
here.
Thus, the gorgeous second-movement violin
solo in Symphony No. 1 becomes an especially intense expression and extension
of emotions first put forth in the opening movement: instead of coming across
as a surprising touch (a beautiful one, to be sure), it seems a logical
heightening of what has come before, stirring the symphony’s emotive power to
new heights by rising above what Brahms has already presented. This helps make
more sense and a more thorough integration of the intermezzo-like, non-scherzo
third movement, whose lovely, lyrical flow here fits neatly into the symphony’s
overall concept. And even the high drama of the finale, in which the Wiener
Symphoniker’s brass really excels, has a genuinely small-r romantic feeling in
addition to the capital-R Romantic one that comes through in just about every
performance of the work.
The songfulness of the first movement of
Symphony No. 2 is scarcely a surprise: Brahms actually quotes one of his songs
in it. But Jordan carries this lullaby-like feeling through much of the
symphony: not only the whole first movement but also the second, despite taking
that movement a bit faster than usual. And even in the brighter second half of
the symphony – where, in this case, the intermezzo-like third movement
represents a change of mood – Jordan never loses sight of the essential
songfulness of the material. That third movement is, after all, marked Allegretto grazioso, in this way tying
to the partial designation of the second as ma
grazioso. It is the third movement’s gracefulness that Jordan highlights to
very fine effect. And while the finale is certainly played with verve and all
the vigor that its Allegro con spirito
marking suggests, Jordan nevertheless finds warmth amid the sparkle – in the
brief solos by individual woodwinds, for example, and in the delicately scored
central section – turning this celebratory conclusion into a capstone that
nevertheless stays in touch with the symphony’s earlier lyrical beauties.
For Jordan, Symphony No. 3, Brahms’
shortest and most tight-knit, becomes quiet, gentle and rather sweet almost
immediately after its forceful opening chords. Jordan sees this as a very
inward-looking symphony, with gentle rocking motion a continual feature. The
transparency of the first movement here is quite different from what is usually
associated with Brahms, giving the music an almost pastoral feeling. The warmth
of the strings in the first movement’s development section is especially
telling, and this warm feeling carries beautifully into and through the second
movement. Jordan is certainly not blind to the symphony’s drama, which comes
through in portions of the first movement and with particular intensity in the
finale. But what he emphasizes is its lyricism, as in the lovely, waltzlike
cantilena of the third movement – an intermezzo that continues and intensifies
the mood established previously instead of contrasting with it. That mood is
heightened further through the darkness pervading most of the finale – this is
a major-key symphony (in F) that often flirts with the minor and has distinct
and unusual minor-key sensibilities throughout. But in keeping with Jordan’s
focus on the symphonies’ lyricism, he emphasizes the poetic nature of the finale’s
themes, and the remarkable quiet, chorale-like conclusion therefore comes
across as a sigh of relief, gentle and accepting after all the turmoil (however
beautifully expressed) that has come before.
Jordan starts Brahms’ Bach-infused
Symphony No. 4 at a fairly slow pace and with great warmth: if the Third is a
major-key symphony with minor-key feeling, the Fourth is the opposite, being in
E minor but having a generally upbeat nature – not quite as sunny as that of
the Second, but certainly positive. The first movement in this performance is
quite special: the expansive lyricism of the themes makes the movement seem
even broader and more wide-ranging than in most performances. Jordan lets the
beauty of the material flow freely, keeping to tempo but bringing forth the
subtlety of Brahms’ scoring to very fine effect. Indeed, this symphony gets the
most-nuanced performance of the four in this set, befitting the high level of
refinement of the music. The transparency of orchestral sound is particularly
pronounced here, and Jordan is especially attentive to the work’s rhythmic flow.
He is also quite careful about tempo indications, and takes the second movement
at a true Andante moderato, not
over-extending it but not rushing it, either. This makes the movement contemplative
but scarcely dour, giving it a feeling of delicacy that is, however, never
dilettantish. Then the third movement, Brahms’ only out-and-out symphonic
scherzo, bubbles along most appealingly, starting ebulliently and with strong
contrast to the second movement. Even here, Jordan finds opportunities to focus
on lyrical, songlike elements, but as a whole, this is a movement that sweeps
away most of the symphony’s earlier seriousness and paves the way for a stately
and elegant finale. Jordan handles the concluding passacaglia with aplomb,
shaping each of the 30 variations with care while ensuring a significant role
for the trombones, which Brahms uses to highlight the underlying religiosity of
a movement directly based on the ostinato from a Bach cantata.
Jordan’s careful focus on every element of Brahms’ symphonies, the discovery and bringing-forth of lyrical beauties throughout the cycle, and the attentiveness to producing a sound that displays Brahms with considerably more clarity than his symphonies often receive, add up to a Brahms symphonic release that is not only excellently played but also thoughtful and emotionally convincing. It could certainly serve someone who does not own a Brahms complete-symphony box as an excellent choice. However, most classical-music listeners surely have one or more Brahms symphony compilations already. Yet even for them, there is enough that is distinctive and distinctly pleasurable in Jordan’s interpretations with the Wiener Symphoniker to make this a worthy addition to an existing collection.
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