Other Links
Editorial Board
- Editor - Bill Kenny
- London Editor-Melanie Eskenazi
- Founder - Len Mullenger
Google Site Search
              SEEN 
              AND HEARD CONCERT    REVIEW
               
            
            Brahms: 
            Heidi Grant 
            Murphy (soprano), Simon Keenlyside (baritone), Philharmonia Chorus, 
            Philharmonia Voices, Philharmonia Orchestra, Lorin Maazel 
            (conductor). Royal Festival Hall, 28.6.2008 (MB)
            
            Brahms – Variations on a theme by Joseph Haydn, Op.56a
            Brahms – Ein deutsches Requiem, Op.45
            
            With this concert, the Philharmonia and Lorin Maazel’s series, 
            ‘Brahms: the Romantic’ reached its conclusion. It is perhaps a pity 
            that none of the smaller vocal and choral works, or indeed the 
            serenades and concertos, were included, but one cannot have 
            everything. After a somewhat sluggish Third Symphony, I rather 
            feared for the Haydn Variations. However, the statement of 
            the St Anthony Chorale struck quite a different note. Deftly 
            articulated and winningly phrased, it was followed by a series of 
            well-characterised variations. The third, for instance, was rather 
            swift – quite a relief! – and struck an aptly serenade-like note. 
            Indeed, throughout the wind were pleasingly characterful. 
            Christopher Cowie’s solo oboe shone in the fourth, as did the 
            violas, once again commandingly led by the excellent Joel Hunter. 
            There followed a lively, rhythmically taut fifth variation and a 
            perky sixth with excellent horns. The seventh variation was 
            graceful, without being skated over; Kenneth Smith was especially 
            notable on the flute here, as once more were the oboe and violas. 
            Hushed, confiding violins in the eighth led us into a noble finale, 
            which exhibited both grace and a good sense of rhythmic and harmonic 
            momentum. The whole orchestra, not least David Corkhill’s triangle, 
            was permitted to shine in the final peroration. This was a fine 
            reading of a work that often receives far less.
            
            There could be no complaints of sluggishness in the German 
            Requiem either; if anything, Maazel’s speeds may have erred on 
            the other side. Certainly the opening sounded a little hasty, 
            although one could appreciated a splendidly cultivated sound to the 
            lower strings. Whilst the second movement, ‘Denn alles Fleisch es 
            ist wie Gras,’ was also on the fast side, it possessed a convincing 
            sense of onward tread, although I found its ending somewhat 
            perfunctory. It was only really the conclusion to the third 
            movement, ‘Herr, lehre doch mich,’ that proved something of a 
            scramble: a pity really, given the convincing role the preceding 
            pulsating of the tonic pedal had played in providing an apt sense of 
            security to the musical events above. In general, the orchestra did 
            an excellent job, ably directed by Maazel. For instance, one could 
            well imagine the woodwind section in the first movement as purveyors 
            of funereal Harmoniemusik, should the near-contradiction be 
            permitted. There was a true sense of passage from darkness 
            into light in the transition to the fugal section of the second 
            movement: the brass section was resplendent and the organ (Malcolm 
            Hicks) added a great deal too. The same could be said of their role 
            in the sixth movement, ‘Denn wir haben hier keine bleibende Statt’, 
            although the raising of the dead incorruptible was a little rushed; 
            the section, ‘Tod, wo ist dein Stachel? …’ was much better in this 
            respect. It is quite a tribute to successful orchestral balancing 
            that one could clearly hear the Beethovenian piccolo (Keith Bragg) 
            above all of this. Violins sounded especially sweet-toned in the 
            consoling fourth movement, ‘Wie lieblich sind deine Wohunungen’, 
            although, after a slightly galumphing fugal section, it was a relief 
            to return to the preceding mood of a celestial Liebeslieder 
            waltz. Schützian trombones were given a welcome opportunity to shine 
            in the final movement, ‘Selig sind die Toten’, an invitation they 
            accepted wholeheartedly. The harps added a welcome glimpse of 
            something hereafter at the very end, whilst they had sounded 
            strangely prominent in the first movement. 
            
            What of the singing? The combined forces of the Philharmonia Chorus 
            and Philharmonia Voices sounded very good on the whole and proved 
            attentive to the demands of the words as well as the music. There 
            was, for example, a wonderful filling out of tone on the word 
            ‘Freuden’ (‘joy’) in the first movement, although the sopranos here 
            could occasionally sound a little shrill. The first return of the 
            opening material in the second movement (and parallel passages) 
            again provided a good, full sound from both chorus and orchestra, 
            splendidly underlain by the kettledrums. I mentioned the somewhat 
            effortful contribution from the chorus in the Handelian fugal 
            section of the fourth movement, but this was very much the 
            exception. The other shortcoming – although I am not sure whose 
            fault this was – was a couple of cases of slight disjuncture between 
            chorus and orchestra in the final movement. However, this movement 
            on the whole evinced an apt sense of reprise, return, and yet 
            progress too, in coming to terms with whatever loss may have 
            afflicted us. Heidi Grant Murphy was adequate as a soprano soloist. 
            I have heard worse but she was overly tremulous, if appropriately 
            maternal. Many of her words, especially later on, were 
            incomprehensible, which was a pity, since Maazel had enabled her 
            movement, the fifth, ‘Ihr habt nun Traurigkeit’, to flow rather 
            nicely. She was not much of an angel. Simon Keenlyside, on the other 
            hand, brought an expected Lieder-singer’s attention to detail 
            to his contributions; this may have been anticipated but was no less 
            welcome for it. There was an occasional slight dryness to his tone, 
            but this was only remarkable on account of the richness that 
            characterised the rest of his part. In the third movement, there was 
            a true sense of him narrating, with the chorus providing Bachian 
            commentary; in the sixth, he proved ardent and eloquent. If this 
            performance did not provide an unforgettable, implacable, 
            Klemperer-like statement, then it boasted many excellent qualities, 
            notably the contributions from the orchestra and from Keenlyside.
            
            Mark Berry
            
            
            
            
            
              
Back to Top Cumulative Index Page

