Tag: Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra

  • Mahler Rattle and Reclaiming My 20s

    Mahler Rattle and Reclaiming My 20s

    Every time I listen to Mahler, I feel like I’m in my 20s again. The whiplash emotional states, the seething, the intensity, and romance. Actually, it’s all right there still, just beneath the surface, but I try to keep a lid on it these days. Now that I’m in my 50s, I’m too old to be storming heaven all the time and hurling myself into volcanoes.

    Even so, it’s nice to remember once in a while by revisiting the symphonies in concert, and last night Sir Simon Rattle brought one of the angstier ones to Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, when he led the touring Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in Mahler’s Symphony No. 6. Sometimes identified by the nickname the “Tragic,” this one has all the vertiginous highs and de profundis lows one expects from this composer – Mahler making good on his pronouncement (to Sibelius, no less) that a symphony must be like the world: it must embrace everything!

    So we get plenty of foreboding and ardent love music and weird macabre passages, crashing cymbals, and eerie harps, and most notoriously, that magnificent hammer delivering the blows of fate. Of course, I’m not convinced it always has quite the effect Mahler intended, as he was savagely lampooned for it in his lifetime, and even last night it elicited big grins and conspiratorial nods from the audience. When you want to suggest something very serious, it’s probably a good idea not to have your percussionist solemnly ascend stairs to a riser to swing a five-foot Bugs Bunny style circus mallet. That said, I wouldn’t have it any other way.

    I’ve seen Rattle conduct Mahler before, of course, in the days when Philadelphia was trying way too hard to land him as its next music director. Back then, he was certainly an effective interpreter, if sometimes prone to mannerisms (which I understand he may not yet have fully shaken, though they were not on display in yesterday’s performance), in particular his obsession with bringing the music’s pianissimos down to a ridiculously hushed level.

    None of that was in evidence last night, and it was satisfying to watch and hear the Bavarians rise to the occasion and ride a few killer waves, especially in the last movement. But for me, the ardent second movement was the most magically sustained, a passionate andante moderato played for all the sublimity it was worth. Rattle opted, as many do, for the composer’s original ordering of the movements, with the scherzo placed third. (Mahler had second thoughts after conducting the symphony’s first performance and decided to flip the scherzo and the andante.) In this movement, I swear, you can sense the love music for virtually every big budget fantasy movie of the 1980s – not quoted outright, necessarily, but completely in spirit. Back in the days when the movies were still wondrous and did wonderful things to your insides, much the way Mahler’s symphonies do.

    Hearing Mahler in concert also reminds me just how important it is to experience these things live. The composer was a master orchestrator, and the 6th is full of unusual touches (the strange duets between Masque-of-the-Red-Death harps and leviathan brass, the bird of prey multi-cymbal effect at the end, and of course, that carnival hammer (ring the bell and you win a cigar!) that just won’t have the same impact when listening on record. Also, in these days of attention deficit classical radio, when’s the last time you heard a complete Mahler symphony, if it doesn’t turn up on a broadcast concert?

    Bravo to Sir Simon, recalled again and again – at least five times – and his German musicians, who each embraced their neighbors as the applause finally began to subside in a kind of life-affirming group hug.

    I would be dead by now if I continued to live my life as tightly-wound as, and at the fever pitch conjured in, Mahler’s symphonies. But it’s nice to remember once in a while what it was like to seethe and combust.


    Beneath the authoritative gaze of Sir Simon: with fellow Mahlerite Robert Moran at the Kimmel – but who is that forehead-slapper photobombing us?

  • Sawallisch’s Quiet Genius Remembered

    Sawallisch’s Quiet Genius Remembered

    Sometimes I get nostalgic for the days when classical music was very nerdy and very Teutonic.

    Here are four renowned conductors – Wolfgang Sawallisch, Fritz Rieger, Rudolf Kempe, and Rafael Kubelik (okay, so Kubelik was Czech) – rehearsing Bach at their respective keyboards, with members of Kubelik’s Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. You get a sense that this is about as informal as these guys ever got! Anyway, it’s a pleasant diversion for a Sunday morning.

    Sawallisch, later music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra, would have been 100 yesterday. I had my eye on the centenary for the past week, and had meant to post about it, but then I got busy and it just passed me by.

    My first exposure to Sawallisch’s musicmaking was in my 20s, during my days in community radio, when I stumbled across his recording of Smetana’s “Ma Vlast,” which I’m happy to say I’ve always retained an affection for. I’ve got it on CD now, but I kind of miss the original overheated cover, when it was issued on vinyl: with its harpist perched atop a jutting reef, assailed by crashing waves, against the backdrop of a diurnal supermoon; its diaphanous, sword-bearing fairy; and its naked women cavorting in a mountain lake, rendered with all the marvelous vulgarity of 1970s airbrushed van-art.

    I couldn’t believe it when a friend of mine broke the news over coffee one afternoon that Sawallisch was coming to Philadelphia. This was a more leisurely time, before we were all lashed to the internet.

    Sawallisch?!!

    That “Ma Vlast” album cover aside, his was a name I had come to associated with Old World integrity and classic (mono) recordings of Richard Strauss. Had he ever even been to the United States? How old was he? I guess at the time he must have been around 70.

    His tenure as music director in Philadelphia would prove to be a high-profile capstone to a very respectable, indeed enviable – if not exactly glamorous – career. There was always something akin to this Bach video about Sawallisch – earnest and all about the music. But there’s something kind of reassuring about returning it now, when seemingly everything is all about flash and dazzle.

    Sawallisch was music director in Philadelphia from 1993 to 2003. In addition to his directorship of L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, he also held posts with the Vienna Symphony (allegedly turning down offers from the Vienna Philharmonic and the Metropolitan Opera), the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra, and the Bavarian State Opera. He died in 2013, six months shy of his 90th birthday.

    Memorably, his abilities as a pianist came in handy during a ferocious snowstorm in 1994, when Philadelphia Orchestra musicians couldn’t make it in for a scheduled concert of scenes from Wagner’s “Tannhäuser” and “Die Walküre” (including all of Act I). He made the impromptu decision to throw open the doors of the Academy of Music and play the accompaniment himself at the keyboard, supporting Deborah Voigt, Heikki Suikola, and chorus, free for the enjoyment of anyone who cared to brave the elements.

    Say want you want about stolid Sawallisch, his generous spirit will not soon be forgotten. If only there were more of the spirit of that “Ma Vlast” van art in his musicmaking.


    Sawallisch conducts “Šárka” from “Má Vlast” in Japan in 1990

  • Mariss Jansons Legendary Conductor Dies at 76

    Mariss Jansons Legendary Conductor Dies at 76

    The conductor Mariss Jansons has died.

    Jansons was born in hiding during the Nazi occupation of Latvia. His mother, the soprano Iraida Jansone, was smuggled out of Riga. His grandfather and uncle were not so lucky. Both were murdered by the Nazis.

    It was Mariss’ father, Arvids Jansons, who introduced him to the violin. Arvids was selected by Yevgeny Mravinsky to serve as assistant conductor of the Leningrad Philharmonic. Mariss studied in Leningrad, Vienna and Salzburg (with Herbert von Karajan). Karajan wanted the young man as his assistant in Berlin, but the appointment was nixed by the Soviet authorities.

    Instead, he became associate conductor of the Leningrad Philharmonic. In 1979, he was installed as music director of the Oslo Philharmonic. He became a familiar presence in London, as a guest conductor with the London Symphony Orchestra and principal guest conductor of the London Philharmonic.

    In the United States, he served as music director of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, from 1997 to 2004. In 2003, he became chief conductor of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. He held the post in Bavaria until his death.

    He also served as chief conductor of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, from 2004 to 2015. Twice, he conducted the internationally popular Vienna Philharmonic New Year’s Concert.

    Jansons cheated death a second time when he survived a serious heart attack in 1996, while conducting a concert in Oslo. Prompt medical attention saved his life. It was the heart that would get him in the end.

    Jansons died yesterday at his home in St. Petersburg. He leaves behind first-rate recordings of Tchaikovsky, Shostakovich and Sibelius, among others. He was 76 years-old. Though he struggled against ill-health, especially for the past year or so, he lived a full life in music, which is what he loved.


    Jansons conducts the Symphony No. 2 by Johan Svendsen:

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