Osmo Vanska, Minnesota Orchestra. BIS BIS-2386 SACD.
By John J. Puccio
The first time I heard the Mahler Seventh (on
vinyl) must have been sometime in the early 1960’s. I can’t remember the
conductor, and it didn’t impress me much. Then, much later, I heard Bernard
Haitink’s first, analogue recording with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, and I
fell in love with it. I never found the recording on CD, and I believe it only
appeared in a box set. Fortunately, Haitink recorded it several more times in
digital with the Concertgebouw and Berlin orchestras, plus I had the pleasure
of being in the audience to listen to him and his Concertgebouw Orchestra
perform it at Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco, and I loved it even more.
So, why am I rattling on about Bernard Haitink and the
Concertgebouw Orchestra when this is a review about Osmo Vanska and the
Minnesota Orchestra? Because they remind me a lot of Haitink and his old crew,
and for me that is one of the greatest compliments I can give to Vanska. I
enjoyed this recording.
The Seventh Symphony has always been one of Gustav
Mahler’s more problematic and ambiguous works. It’s a transitional piece
connecting the darker Sixth Symphony with the triumphant Eighth.
Of course, musical scholars point out how Mahler connected all nine (or ten or
eleven) of his symphonies, forming one grand musical statement. If there is a
grand scheme in things Mahler, the Seventh has long been the neglected
stepchild of the lot. While the other symphonies get most of the love, the Seventh
often goes wanting for recordings and performances.
Mahler (1860-1911) wrote his Symphony No. 7 in E minor
in 1904-05. Along with the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies, the Seventh
forms a middle trio of Mahler symphonies, all of them purely orchestral, with
the Seventh being the oddest of the group. Even more so than most of
Mahler’s works, its five movements are open to multiple interpretations,
especially with the subtitle “Song of the Night.” I remember one critic once
explaining that the symphony was a recounting by Mahler of a trip to the
countryside, complete with his packing of suitcases, traveling through rural
roads, along pastures, and on to his destination. Other critics see its five
movements more generally as a journey from dusk until dawn or a nighttime walk
into the morning, the whole thing a kind of eccentric, extended nocturne. If
Eugene O’Neill wrote Long Day’s Journey into Night, you might consider
Mahler’s Seventh a “Long Night’s Journey into Day.”
Osmo Vanska |
Anyhow, the last time I reviewed Vanska doing Mahler, it
was the First Symphony, where I thought Vanska was a little
undernourished compared to the more pronounced realizations of conductors like
Solti (HDTT or Decca), Mackerras (EMI), Horenstein (Unicorn), Kubelik (DG),
Bernstein (DG and Sony), and Tennstedt (EMI). But here in the Seventh,
it’s different. Vanska’s more gentle view of the subject is a welcome change
from some of the overcharged, exaggerated, sometimes brutal accounts we often
get. Vanska’s vision is one I can live with.
Mahler declared his Seventh Symphony his “best
work” and its character “preponderantly cheerful,” probably because of the
“tragic” nature of his preceding Sixth Symphony. Accordingly, Vanska
approaches the Seventh with a lighter touch than, say, Solti or Abbado
would.
The symphony has five movements: an opening and closing
that act as sort of daylight bookends, and two Nachtmusiks on either
side of a central scherzo. It’s really these “night music” sections that are at
the core of the work. They are sweet, capricious, and eerie at the same time,
as Vanska illustrates. Perhaps the first Nachtmusik is an early evening
nocturne and the second an early morning nocturne. Mahler left no program for
the music, so it’s up to the conductor and the listener to interpret things for
themselves. Vanska employs a delicate hand with both Nachtmusiks. Then
there’s that scherzo in the middle, which clearly relates to the surrounding Nachtmusik
in that Mahler subtitles it “Shadowy.” If we see the music as a journey through
the long hours of the night, surely the scherzo is around the witching time of
midnight. Vanska takes the swirling waltz-like melodies at a graceful tempo,
though, the whole thing floating above the fray.
The symphony ends on a jubilant, triumphant, Wagnerian
note, which again perplexed some early critics who couldn’t see its connection
to the musical moods that came before it. It does kind of pop up out of
nowhere, yet Vanska’s conciliatory touch draws them pleasingly, if not entirely
convincingly, together.
OK, so I liked Vanska’s recording. Does that mean I would
recommend it ahead of Haitink’s? Well, think about it. Osmo Vanska is an
excellent conductor, and the Minnesota Orchestra is one of the best in the
country. Bernard Haitink is a great conductor, and the Concertgebouw Orchestra
is one of the best in the world. However, Haitink’s Concertgebouw recording is
hard to find anymore, what with Philips being long gone. And not only is
Vanska’s recording easily available, it’s just short enough (without being
rushed) to (barely) fit on a single disc. All things considered, Vanska’s
Mahler Seventh is another top choice to consider.
Producer Robert Suff and engineer Thore Brinkmann recorded
the symphony in Orchestra Hall, Minneapolis, Minnesota in November 2018. They
made the recording in hybrid SACD for either multichannel surround or
two-channel stereo from the SACD layer or two-channel stereo from the regular
CD layer. I listened in SACD two-channel stereo. Here, you’ll find smooth,
balanced, concert hall sound that complements the music nicely. While it’s a
bit dark and detailing may not be as pinpoint accurate as some audiophiles
might prefer, it is fairly realistic. And timpani are especially well served.
JJP
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click below:
John—I'm never going to purchase any Mahler, but I'm curious about the play time length of this CD. You indicate that it was a close fit. How close? How long is the actual CD play time? (Note: The absolute max. = 80 minutes.)
ReplyDeleteBryan Geyer
77:30
ReplyDeleteWell, that's indeed a full CD! About the most that I've ever encountered before ran for between 75 & 76 minutes. There's got to be some extra stress placed on the conductor when the timing gets this tight. Or maybe he was trying to recall a suitable 2 minute encore.
ReplyDelete