This is a tribute disc to mark the 75th 
          birthday of the conductor Michael Gielen. German-born, he spent formative 
          years in Buenos Aires, which was no bad place to be for a young budding 
          conductor (despite the tragic circumstances of being a member of a Jewish 
          family fleeing from Nazi persecution). Both Fritz Busch and Erich Kleiber 
          were resident in the city. 
        
 
        
Gielen has made his name as a conductor of contemporary 
          works, and having played Schoenberg’s complete piano works to the composer 
          on his 75th birthday he certainly had a thorough schooling. 
          He has spent years as GMD (General Music Director) of various top rank 
          opera houses (Frankfurt, Stockholm, Amsterdam) and has led orchestras 
          in Europe and America, as well as becoming a pedagogue of conducting 
          at various European centres. His association with the SWF Radio Orchestra 
          goes back to 1986, and since 1999 it is described as ‘Permanent Guest 
          Conductor’. 
        
 
        
Before getting to the interpretations of both works 
          on this CD, mention must be made of the appalling incoherence of the 
          booklet. Record companies really do have to get their act together and 
          ensure such travesties as this do not find their way into their booklets. 
          It does them no credit, nor I imagine would Gielen or his English agent 
          approve. Here are a couple of extracts of this gobbledegook: 
        
        
 
           
            His years in Baden-Baden began in 1986 to lead 
              (and are still leading) all around to that which had long been Michael 
              Gielen’s wish - archived (and commercially available) tapes and 
              CD’s which are able extensively to document his view of the 
              works of music history from Johann Sebastian Bach to George Lopez 
              - and which a symphony orchestra such as that of the Südwest(rund)funk 
              could but wish for - which record concerts at home and on tour whose 
              "publica" often announce with their unremitting applause 
              at the outset what they do not expect, namely, any trace of the 
              boring or the commonplace. 
            
 
            
…It would appear that even the uninitiated now 
              know what Gielen stands for, what he does, who he is: an "outsider" 
              (honored with the "Cannes Classical Lifetime Achievement Award 
              2002", following the Adorno Prize, the Great Federal Service 
              Cross, honorary doctorate …) who has allied himself with the outsider 
              quality of the art works in order steadfastly to help them win the 
              recognition which is their due. 
            
            
          
        
        More coherent and pertinent are Gielen’s own comments 
          on Schubert in general and the ‘Great’ C major symphony in particular, 
          so maybe he should have written his own curriculum vitae for the booklet. 
          He was brought up on Furtwängler’s (slow) interpretation but was 
          taken to task by his teacher Josef Polnauer, a Viennese, who pointed 
          out that the opening theme is a ‘walking theme’ (Andante) and Schubert’s 
          original marking has turned out to be 2/2 rather than 4/4, in other 
          words twice the ‘traditional’ speed (Norrington has recorded it thus). 
          It makes perfect sense, for it also explains why it has always been 
          traditional and necessary for this ‘problematic’ introduction to accelerate 
          into the Allegro. However by taking it from the outset at double the 
          speed we are used to hearing it proves unnecessary to make any change 
          of tempo, the result a wonderfully seamless progression. Gielen, in 
          his own words, points out that the ‘walking theme’ must be seen as ‘relatively 
          young people in Vienna at the time, so keen on marching from wine garden 
          to wine garden, tasting the new vintage wine’, a wonderful image. 
        
 
        
Strauss’s waltz for full orchestra makes an enjoyable 
          and joyous filler and Gielen’s clearly Viennese origins explore a freedom 
          of tempo and rubato to achieve a warm-blooded performance. Throughout 
          the disc the orchestra plays well for him despite some hard-edged timbres 
          in its full sound, for instance at the opening of the finale of the 
          symphony. All in all it did not quite bring tears to my ears (Gielen 
          confesses as much in his essay on Schubert’s music) but he does make 
          some interesting musical points. 
        
 
        
        
Christopher Fifield