Philippe
Herreweghe, Orchestre des Champs-Elysees. Harmonia Mundi HMG 501921.
The Symphony No. 4
“Romantic” in E flat major by Anton Bruckner (1824-1896) is probably the
Austrian composer most-popular piece of music. This is in no small part because
of its abundance of Romantic, dramatic, programmatic, and spiritual touches.
The thing is, there are already about 800 different recordings of it available,
some of them by very prominent conductors and orchestras like Eugen Jochum and
the Berlin Philharmonic (DG), Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic
(DG), Gunther Wand and the Berlin Philharmonic (RCA), Otto Klemperer and the
Philharmonia Orchestra (EMI), Karl Bohm and the Vienna Philharmonic (Decca),
and Georg Tintner and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra (Naxos). So, what
might compel a listener to try this rerelease from Philippe Herreweghe and his
Orchestre des Champs-Elysees?
Well, for one thing the listener might be an avid
collector of all things Bruckner and want every recording of every piece of
music the man ever wrote. Fair enough.
More important for the rest of us, however, is that
Herreweghe’s recording has a claim to being at least one of the most
historically accurate performances ever recorded. In the words of the ensemble
itself, “The Orchestre des Champs-Elysees is devoted to the performance of
music written from the mid XVIII to the early XX centuries (Haydn-Mahler)
played on the instruments that existed during the composer's lifetime.” Meaning
they play on period instruments and, insofar as they can, play in a
historically informed manner.
The thing is, Bruckner initially wrote his symphony in
1874, which comes very close, within a quarter century or so, of the modern
age. Could there really be an advantage to hearing the work played on period
instruments and in a period style? Let’s look at a history of the symphony’s
multiple revisions for a start. Bruckner composed the original version in 1874,
as I say. Then he revised parts of it in 1877-78, among other things writing an
entirely new Scherzo. In 1879-80 he
again revised the Finale. In 1881 he
premiered the revised version, but he quickly added a few more corrections
before the second performance. In 1887-88 conductor Ferdinand Lowe prepared the
proofs for publication, but these differed considerably from Bruckner’s
autograph score; Bruckner accepted them anyway. By the time of the symphony’s
actual publication, it differed substantially from Bruckner’s initial vision.
Various revised scores have appeared over the years, but it is the 1878
version, which Bruckner regarded as the only valid one, that Herreweghe
performs here.
Now, on to the recording. As we have come to expect from
Herreweghe and his period forces, the reading is quite good. It just take a
while for one to get used to it. By that, I mean Herreweghe’s rendering sounds
a bit thinner, harsher, and less grandiloquent than most other recordings.
That’s understandable, considering the ensemble he uses, with the period
instruments. Still, there is much to enjoy in his rendition.
As you recall, the composer tells us what each of the
movements represents, from knights riding out of a medieval castle through the
mists of dawn to the sounds of the forest and birds, to a funeral, then a hunt,
complete with horn calls, and then a brilliant culminating summation. Bruckner
was a profoundly spiritual man, and his symphonies all illustrate the point,
with the Fourth Symphony being the
most programmatic of all.
In the first movement, Herreweghe’s manner can be a bit
strict when it comes to nuances, and he could better characterize those opening
mists. Nevertheless, the conductor does a good job communicating Bruckner's
vision of Nature and his several scenic landscapes, reminding us of how much
the composer admired both Beethoven and Wagner. He captures the heroic features
of the first subject in lively, if not so grand, style; and he goes on to a
pleasant statement of the ensuing, more peaceful, secondary theme.
The second-movement Andante
should sound at least vaguely elegiac. Herreweghe takes this section, halfway
between a nocturne and a march, at a slow but comfortable pace, without making
it drag on as we sometimes hear. Even if he tends to lose a little momentum
toward the middle, he makes up for it with the beauty and vitality of the
opening and closing passages.
Following that we find a vigorous Scherzo, which Bruckner teasingly called “a rabbit hunt,” building
a proper momentum as it progresses. The hunt and the hunters' meal come off
colorfully under Herreweghe, with the conductor providing plenty of vigor to
the affair.
Lastly, in the Finale,
as with the Scherzo, Bruckner would
again take the heroic opening theme and the more-idyllic second subject and
rework them into his closing statement. Herreweghe handles them well,
conveniently ensuring they don't appear too redundant by this time. Perhaps,
too, Bruckner knew what he was up to reducing the more-obvious repetition of
material from earlier in the symphony and keeping it more cheerful. Herreweghe
steers a middle ground between optimism and tragedy, the light and dark side of
the composer. The movement still seems to me too long, but at least Herreweghe
makes it more provocative and exciting than some other conductors.
As you become more accustomed to Herreweghe's historical
approach and historical instruments, the more you may come to appreciate his
Bruckner Fourth. While I could not
recommend the recording as the only one a person should own, there is no reason
a person shouldn't have Herreweghe's account available as a feasible
alternative to the bigger, grander recordings from Jochum, Klemperer, Bohm,
Wand, and the rest of the more-modern interpreters.
Harmonia Mundi recorded the music at the Auditorium de
Dijon, France, in October 2005, and the company rereleased it in its present
form in 2013. The sound is a bit too warm, soft, fuzzy, and reverberant for my
taste, but it also appears pretty natural to a big acoustic space. In addition,
the sound displays a wide dynamic range, so it starts off very softly and
builds to a huge crescendo in the opening minute or two. It's fairly
satisfying, if not entirely as transparent as it could be. Also, be aware that
the period instruments are not going to sound as smooth as today's modern ones,
so you have that to adjust to them as well, the upper midrange being a tad
edgy. However, some solid, well-defined transient impact helps to make us
forget many of the recording’s minor shortcomings.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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