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              SEEN 
              AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
 
                           
                           Beethoven:  
                           
                           Ricarda Merbeth (soprano), Mihoko Fujimura (mezzo), 
                           Jonas Kaufmann (tenor), Albert Dohmen (bass), 
                           Munich Philharmonic, Christian Thielemann 
                           (conductor), Philharmonie at the Gasteig, Munich – 
                           New Years Concert. 30.12.2008 (JFL)
                           
                           
                           
                           Beethoven, Symphony No.9 op.125
                           
                           
                           
                           
                           When the Munich Philharmonic raffled off tickets to
                           
                           
                           
                           their performance of Beethoven’s Ninth 
                           Symphony under Christian Thielemann in July of this 
                           year, only about two thirds of winners bothered to 
                           show up and make use of their free tickets. Half a 
                           year later, with the same program for the two New 
                           Years concerts and tickets selling at a premium, the 
                           Philharmonic Hall at the Gasteig was packed and 
                           scores of would-be attendees with “Ticket Sought” 
                           signs had to be sent back out into the dark night 
                           with their hopes of squeezing in unfulfilled. The 
                           lesson about the relation between price and worth is 
                           inescapable.
                           
                           The performance, imbued with the glow of the special 
                           occasion, was a good example that a great 
                           interpretation need not necessarily be played well. A 
                           number of individual mistakes, ensemble issues, and 
                           sub-par singing might have brought down a lesser 
                           performance. But this one – to these ears, at least – 
                           barely budged. In telling comparison with the 
                           virtually perfect 
                           
                           
                           
                           performance of the Bavarian State Orchestra’s 
                           Eroica
                           two weeks ago, this should not have been all that 
                           satisfactory, and yet the atmosphere of Thielemann’s 
                           Beethoven, the ‘mood’ of this performance more than 
                           made up for it. There was the way the different 
                           voices emerged and submerged in the first movement – 
                           each with their own character: an audibly 
                           heterogeneous multitude that came together as a 
                           harmonious whole, after all. The execution may have 
                           been a step back from the July performance, but the 
                           interpretation was notably different – more 
                           individualistic and worked-out. And “different” with 
                           Thielemann presumably doesn’t mean “arbitrarily 
                           altered”, or changed on a whim, but different as in 
                           further along the trajectory of Thielemann’s quest 
                           for whatever version would be his ideal realization.
                           
                           The inner movements particularly charmed me – the 
                           second movement with its tension and explosive 
                           releases beneath tenderness, the third with a warmth 
                           and radiance that sounded gentle and thrilled at the 
                           same time. Phrases were enunciated with overt 
                           attention and care, none were allowed to fly by the 
                           ears as meaningless or less important, the attention 
                           never sagged. The cello entry in the fourth movement 
                           on the “Freude schöner Götterfunken” tune – after an 
                           elaborate Kunstpause, was so soft, so finely 
                           spun, it caused the otherwise cough-happy audience to 
                           collectively hold its breath. The resulting intensity 
                           was about enough to bring tears to one’s eyes… 
                           assuming one didn’t find Thielemann’s elaborate 
                           involvement in the score overbearing or tedious, of 
                           course.
                           
                           Too bad bass Albert Dohmen was slipping and sliding 
                           through his music with a voice sounding worn well 
                           beyond Dohmen’s mere 52 years. Mihoko Fujimura and 
                           Ricarda Merbeth sang without fault but could surely 
                           have been made to complement one another better with 
                           a little more rehearsal. Jonas Kaufmann, meanwhile, 
                           is one of the maybe four singers I actually want to 
                           hear in the tenor part’s challenge (the others being 
                           Werner Güra, Klaus Florian Vogt, and Piotr Beczala). 
                           Kaufmann did remarkably well, but even he had trouble 
                           being heard above the Philharmonic Choir happily 
                           singing its guts out and Thielemann doing anything 
                           but reign in his orchestral forces. Altogether 
                           troubled, yet splendid!
                           
                           
                           
                           Jens F. Laurson
