I welcomed warmly John Eliot Gardiner’s LSO recording
of
Mendelssohn’s
Scottish
symphony
and said that I couldn’t wait for the next instalment in his series.
Here it is, and it isn’t disappointing. In fact, it showcases Gardiner’s
forensic method of working and his very good relationship with the LSO.
The two overtures are extremely successful.
Ruy Blas is bitingly
dramatic. Its brooding, ominous opening speaks clearly to the mood of Hugo’s
drama with its suspensions and eerie chords, and the allegro that follows
is characterised by febrile, agitated strings that compel the whole drama
forward, even in the major key second theme.
Calm Sea, on the other
hand, opens with a brilliant depiction of musical stasis. The vibratoless
strings, with a particularly resonant bass line, underline the sense of nothing
whatever happening, the ship stuck in the middle of its vast, imprisoning
ocean, and it manages to convey its own sense of drama, for all the stillness.
You can then feel the wind catching the sails as the flute enters at 3:18,
and from this point on the overture builds up a head of steam that it never
loses, the thundering timpani helping the ship into harbour. Perhaps that
lack of vibrato slightly underplays the elation of the final pages, but it’s
nevertheless very satisfying.
That same string tone lends a sense of pregnant expectation to the beginning
of the
Reformation symphony. Those massive brass notes that ring
out from 1:21 onwards are intoned with seriousness, even portent, suggesting
that something big is about to happen. The appearance of the Dresden Amen
seems to heighten this, rather than soothe it, and the ensuing Allegro is
full of thrust and parry, underlining the musical argument through clean orchestral
textures and Gardiner’s legendary ear for detail. It’s very exciting,
and the strength of the symphonic argument is formidable. There is a skittish,
heel-kicking feel to the Scherzo, while the third movement, again, gains much
of its soul from the colour of the LSO string sound. The finale then moves
consistently forward with a progress that feels, if not inevitable, then unarguable.
The Lutheran chorale theme is used as a unifying factor rather than an obsessive
totem, and I loved the way Gardiner points up the colour of the treatment
that each section of the orchestra gives it. The blaze of the final peroration
is thrilling, and Gardiner manages to give the impression that it shouldn’t
really sound any other way.
The BD-A is impressive, too, with very good surround sound, but there’s
no film this time, just the audio. That leads me to my only criticism: the
playing time for the discs is pretty stingy. At only 47 minutes, they could
easily have included a substantial extra item. It’s really only the
inclusion of the Blu-ray that allows any argument that this set is good value
for money, and even then that’s pushing it.
Simon Thompson