Germany Ebracher Musiksommer – Gigantisch: Philharmonie Festiva / Gerd Schaller (conductor). Ebrach Abbey, Germany. 14.7.2024. (KW)
Bruckner – Symphony No.8 (1890)
On the tumultuous shut of this quick and passionate efficiency of Bruckner’s Eighth Symphony, Maestro Schaller held his arms aloft, the second frozen, a shocked and prolonged silence, and I stated to myself, ‘What the blazes was that?’ – or phrases to that impact! It was a sense as if one had stood upon the station platform ready for the circuitous sluggish prepare to heaven, and abruptly, unexpectedly, a mighty specific had thundered by way of. It was typically a really loud efficiency, and a efficiency that was over in not far more than an hour and ten minutes, the primary motion took simply over 13 minutes, the Adagio considerably lower than 21 minutes – faster than most likely all these you will discover listed on John Berky’s discography at abruckner.com.
It was such a shock partly as a result of we have been right here with the orchestra in an ecclesiastical house, the huge Abbey at Ebrach, the place you anticipate the quiet and the meditative – and a measured slowness. We all know our Bruckner’s Eighth, a monumental and deeply profound work and, as Robert Simpson tells us, Bruckner teaches us persistence. However proper from the beginning, the opening theme carried a way of pressing and anxious aspiration, every phrase formed to surge emphatically in the direction of its momentary vacation spot, the next phrase impatiently carrying the vitality ahead. The fast tempo helped make the transition to the second theme completely seamless, and the music that this Gesangsperiode sang was not for a second a matter of lyrical leisure, however extra one in all heartfelt assertiveness and gathering momentum.
The efficiency of the primary motion swept you up with hardly a second to mirror on the grim and violent crises of its climaxes, the entire motion displaying a unity of goal, an awe-inspiring grip on the lengthy line of the musical argument. On the finish, the repeated phrases of the closing ‘demise watch’ have been completely metronomic, a tempo, and no diminuendo. All of the sudden it was over! After this, the Scherzo gave the impression to be filled with joyful exuberance, the thumping timpani as thrilling to look at as to listen to, the stirring, climbing bass line in cellos and double basses within the crescendo (bars 11-18) in the midst of the exposition of the theme, delivered to the fore. The trio was by no means in peril of pre-empting the sluggish motion correct, and if it was a dream, then it was a songful dream of triumphant vitality.
Enjoying the huge Adagio at a ‘flowing’ tempo actually achieved, as within the first motion, a way of the lengthy line and the unity of the motion. The arpeggio motive of the opening theme, at bar 15, surged upon us abruptly at an elevated tempo, giving added pleasure and course, the vacation spot finally to be revealed as the identical motive forming the principle climax. All of the landmark moments of the motion have been, in fact, in place, however not as we’re used to listening to them. The ultra-slow religioso was nowhere to be heard; it appeared extra an agitated and infrequently loud celebration of Bruckner’s wonderful melodies and sounds. On the best way as much as the climax the allusions to the heroic Siegfried motive rang out impetuously and Schaller remained true to his interpretation even within the closing pages of the Adagio which, reasonably just like the shut of the primary motion, made no concession to sentimentality, no unmarked decelerando or diminuendo, the music a tempo and sounding reasonably as if it have been a mild finish to a serenade.
Tempo for the Finale was not so removed from that adopted by many different conductors – on the fast facet however not unprecedented. Even so, the motion rushed by, fraught with drama and occasion, the brass resplendent, the timpani dramatic. Schaller was ready to make sure that the course and coherence of the music was by no means doubtful, and the magnificent coda was quick and really thrilling, the Scherzo theme ringing out, now gloriously triumphant, above the sonorous superimposition of the symphony’s themes. The general impact was fairly shattering.
Little question, in case you are wedded to performances of the stature of Karajan, Jochum, Giulini, Wand et al, Schaller’s tackle this music is not going to be to your style. And certainly, 14 years earlier, judging from his recording of the 1888 ‘variant’ of the primary model, Schaller’s strategy was far more expansive than it’s now, that recorded efficiency lasting about 13 minutes longer than this current efficiency. However how refreshing it’s to listen to an interpretation of the symphony so totally different from that which we’re used to listening to, gigantic and monumental certainly, however shorn of a lot of the paranormal trappings, the sluggish and infrequently reasonably heavy profundity that’s introduced by these different well-known interpretations; as an alternative we heard a symphony of turbulent pleasure, passionate vitality all through, with a powerful sense of line and of the over-arching type, celebrating the complexity and the liveliness, the coherence and the sheer glory of the sound of Bruckner’s music. And naturally, the Philharmonie Festiva performed splendidly as they at all times do, a efficiency filled with dedication and panache.
The version was unspecified, and because the authentic manuscripts are actually all obtainable to peruse on-line, it’s attainable that the conductor made his personal version as he has for some performances of different Bruckner symphonies. Nonetheless, I heard nothing to determine it as being apart from the Nowak version. The efficiency was recorded by BR Klassik and will likely be issued on CD by Hänssler Profil.
Ken Ward