Bruckner:
Symphony No. 1. Altomonte Orchester
St. Florian conducted by Rémy Ballot. Gramola. $24.99 (SACD).
Bruckner:
Symphony No. 2. Altomonte Orchester
St. Florian conducted by Rémy Ballot. Gramola. $28.99 (2 SACDs).
The 2024 bicentennial of Bruckner’s birth has served, among other
things, to cement the notion of an abyss between conductors who look for
lighter, more Schubertian approaches to Bruckner’s symphonies and those who see
them as grand-scale cathedrals of sound to be built sumptuously to towering
heights. Mario Venzago and some others are on the “lighter” side of Bruckner
interpretation; at the opposite end of the scale are conductors such as Rémy
Ballot. The intriguing thing about Bruckner’s symphonies is that they work so
well in either approach to interpretation – although questions about which version
of which symphony to conduct also figure into the complicated equation.
Ballot has been conducting one Bruckner symphony per year with the
Altomonte Orchester St. Florian since 2013, with the exception of 2020 – a
pandemic-related interruption of the project. The symphonies have been performed
in no logical order and then offered as live recordings on the Gramola label.
The series of nine is now complete – there seem to be no plans for Ballot to
conduct No. “0” or the very early F minor “Study” symphony. Ballot’s versions of
Nos. 1 and 2 certainly cement his position as the prime advocate of Bruckner
writ large – indeed, as large as possible.
For Symphony No. 1, Ballot chooses the late “Vienna” version of 1891
rather than the more-often-heard 1877 “Linz” version (which, to complicate
matters as so often happens with Bruckner, was actually prepared in Vienna).
While Venzago zips through the symphony in a very fleet 44 minutes, Ballot is
nearly 50% slower at almost 64. As a result, the Venzago and Ballot performances
neatly bookend the concept of lighter, speedier Bruckner on the one hand, and
grander, slower Bruckner on the other. Bruckner aficionados without a strong
absolutist commitment to one approach or the other will surely want to own
both.
Ballot starts out the symphony in a manner as expansive as always, the
anticipatory marchlike beat leading into the first forte passage being very clear. The music is presented as if
Bruckner and the audience have all the time in the world for it to unfold. The
themes bloom with the inevitability of flowers, the sectional balance is
superb, and the overall sound is warmly lyrical. There is an inevitability to
the musical flow, a sound more like late Bruckner than earlier Bruckner – which
tends to be more episodic. Ballot is expert at knitting the sections of the
movement together so it does not sound disjointed. The movement is slow by
clock time but does not feel that way, since Ballot maintains a clear rhythmic
pulse throughout. The second movement is a very broad and expansive Adagio, with lower strings setting a
firm foundation above which a brass-led edifice is constructed. The beauty of
the themes shines forth at this pace, and the movement grows naturally,
meandering somewhat as if on a pastoral walk. There is remarkable cohesion in
the orchestra. The lighter touches from woodwinds neatly set off the underlying
seriousness of the material, and the movement has none of the stop-and-start
characteristics that appear in some later Bruckner slow movements. What it does
have is a sense of questing, perhaps of climbing to heights – but there is no
urgency to the effort and there is plenty of time to take in the scenery. The
brass chorale near the movement’s end has the sensation of attaining a peak, or
of the sun suddenly emerging from behind clouds.
The third movement is broad but not especially slow, although perhaps
not Schnell as it is marked.
It is slightly ponderous, but in return is quite rhythmically emphatic. The
evenness of tempo is a big plus, as are the excellent horns. The Trio provides
strong contrast, with considerably greater delicacy, and then fades away for
the return of the Scherzo – leading
to a satisfactorily dramatic close. The finale, the longest movement by a
considerable amount, is somewhat episodic. It strides forth strongly, then
lapses into much more delicate territory, which Ballot explores at length,
giving a feeling of breadth. The first, inevitable pause, after
three-and-a-half minutes, ushers in a chamber-music-like attentiveness to
detail that is almost Mahlerian in its use of the orchestra, with Ballot
shaping each section's contribution with consummate care. Thereafter the ebb
and flow of full-orchestra and sectional material progresses naturally, albeit
with a certain lack of forward progress that is more apparent because of
Ballot's tempo choices. The playing is very beautiful, but the pacing does
accentuate a certain lack of cohesion in the movement, even though Bruckner
modified it for this late version of the symphony. Ballot explores individual
sections with great skill, but the movement never quite hangs together – a matter
of its compositional structure that could indeed be somewhat ameliorated with a
bit more speed. That said, the buildup toward the climax, starting five minutes
before the end, is impressively and effectively managed, and the conclusion
itself has a monumental quality befitting any of Bruckner's symphonies.
Symphony No. 2 is a more-substantial work, and one that Ballot stretches
to very considerable length: it is usually around a 70-minute piece – 71
minutes under Georg Tintner in the 1872 version (Venzago uses the shorter 1877
version and conducts it in 56). Ballot’s pacing of this symphony is so grand,
almost grandiose, that it does not fit on a single disc: it runs 85 minutes.
But of course the speed does not tell the whole story – what matters is how
well the overall conception works. In the first movement, the opening gives no
hint of just how expansive the performance will become – but as soon as the
second theme emerges, the pace becomes very relaxed, leisurely, and quite
Schubertian. This work’s nickname, "symphony of pauses," fits very
well here, since Ballot does not hesitate to take the indicated full stops and
even extend them a bit into pauses-with-fermatas. This certainly creates a
somewhat episodic feeling, but it also allows the highlighting of individual
sections of the music, almost as if multiple miniature tone poems have been
strung together into a tonal tapestry larger than the sum of its parts. The
sheer scale, the monumental nature of the symphony, comes through – but the
delicacy and lyrical beauty of the playing keep the movement from ever seeming
ponderous. Again and again, a section rises to a climax, and again and again,
Bruckner stops to consider matters from a different perspective; and Ballot
provides unerring guidance on the journey, abetted by exceptionally fine sound.
One advantage of this approach is the way it moves toward climactic passages at
a deliberate pace so they become all the more compelling when they arrive, as is
especially apparent at the movement’s conclusion. The Scherzo is placed second – Bruckner later switched it to third,
provoking some of the same issues associated with the movement sequence in
Mahler’s Symphony No. 6. In any case, Ballot’s handling of the Scherzo is not really Schnell as marked, but once the audience
adjusts to the pace, the movement becomes another carefully structured part of
the edifice being assembled. The detail of the string playing is excellent, and
the warmth of the brass is notable. The trio is marked to be played at the same
speed, and the pacing actually works better here than for the main body of the
movement, without the lumbering quality of the Scherzo and with plenty of time to enjoy the lyrical expansiveness
of the strings. As a result, the tempo at the return of the Scherzo actually sounds more reasonable
after the conclusion of the Trio. And
the timpani accents are particularly effective near the movement's end.
The solemnity (Feierlich) indicated
for the third movement is very much in evidence in Ballot’s performance. The
movement is very relaxed from the start, with clear echoes of Schubert and a
great feeling of spaciousness. There is clarity of melodic line plus fine sectional
balance: it feels as if it will slow to stasis but never quite does. Ballot
spins the music out in longer and longer lines, allowing the woodwind and brass
touches to bring the strings into high relief. The pizzicato strings' contrast with the rounded brass sound is
particularly well done. The movement builds very gradually in volume and
intensity, as if Bruckner has all the time that anyone could possibly need to
erect this sonic structure. Even the fades to silence are carefully paced to
add to the overall effect. And then comes the finale, which immediately starts
building with considerable drama. Again and again, Ballot produces anticipation
of still greater intensity to come. But what actually emerges is a beautifully
flowing sylvan line of pastoral simplicity, in which strings glide along as if
carried on the gentle waves of a stream – after which Ballot reintroduces the
more strongly emphasized material so as to maximize the differences between
thematic groups. And so the movement progresses as a series of carefully staged
contrasts, periodically interrupted by a full stop, as if to provide respite
from the back-and-forth elements. Despite the strength of some portions of the
movement, the primary impression here is one of gentleness, a kind of spreading
warmth that Ballot spins out at length. The movement does tend to sprawl,
especially at this pace, but the care with which it is structured is everywhere
in evidence. And the climactic final three minutes encapsulate the whole
symphony. Strong rhythms, great intensity, full stops, delicate winds, massed
brass – all these are present and marshalled for a truly grand conclusion.
There is no one “right” way to conduct Bruckner or, for that matter, to listen to his symphonies. Ballot’s handling of these works has proved consistently excellent for a decade – and internally consistent in its approach to every one of the symphonies. By virtue of its very deliberate speed, the Ballot approach does exist at something of an extreme in Bruckner interpretation. But again and again, clock time becomes irrelevant as Ballot marshals his forces to explore and elucidate the emotional and performance intricacies with which Bruckner packed all his symphonies. The Ballot cycle is a highly impressive achievement by any standards – a monumental accomplishment fully worthy of the celebration of the bicentennial of a composer whose music, like so much other great art, can be interpreted and reinterpreted again and again without anyone ever coming up with an unattainable perfection of presentation.
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