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MAHLER:
Symphony No.7
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Conducted by Yoel Levi
Telarc 2CD-80514

I had reservations about Levi's recording of Mahler's Sixth a couple of years ago, but here in the Seventh Symphony he seems to have found his Mahlerian home. You can learn a great deal about a conductor's approach to this work by the way he interprets the first 133 bars. I'll say straight away that, for me, Levi passes this test with flying colours and goes on to give a performance of the whole work that can stand among the best. Mahler marks the opening "Langsam" and Levi bravely takes the composer at his word, pushing it to the limit of endurance so that, when the march-like episode arrives at bar 19, he can make the crucial increase in tempo asked for without rushing things. An impressive achievement when you sometimes hear this "jump-off" point spoiled by not getting the tempo relationships sorted from the start. Then at bar 27, when the first Tempo returns, the resulting drag on our senses is acute, as I believe it should be, because Mahler surely doesn't want us to stray from the rowing motion that inspired him to write this passage. The lovely second subject on violins, one of Mahler's questing themes, can now also afford to be spaciously mapped by Levi and, with what has gone before, rounds off a splendid opening that promises things to come. And Levi doesn't disappoint. His care for the way each part of the movement fits into the whole doesn't desert him and even allows him to continue the kind of mood he has indicated he believes the movement demands: spacious, lyrical and searching. So, as the Development gets underway, there's a dreamy, Brucknerian restraint saved from undue languor by the perky contributions from the woodwind which the sound recording allows us to hear in excellent context. In fact, right through the performance, the recorded balance gives space, air and richness all at once. For a passage showing conductor, orchestra and engineers at their best listen to bars 317-377 and the wonderful reach of the melodic line sustained over immense spaces. With the entry of the solo trombone at the Recapitulation we hear Levi aware also of the darker side to Mahler's inspiration. Then, with his treatment of the more vigorous concluding march that seems to dominate the music by then, there's rigour also. So, even though this first movement under Levi is on a grand scale, (though not so grand it falls into the bear trap that awaited Klemperer in his dotage), it's through-thought and capable of exploring every avenue.

Levi treats both Nachtmusik movements (the second and fourth) as islands of calm amid the hurly-burly that the first and fifth movements represent. The first Nachtmusik is a splendid showcase for the horn and woodwind players of the Atlanta Symphony, the latter so impressive in the first movement. I also liked the distance the engineers give to the cowbells, accentuating the sense of space this recording possesses. The second Nachtmusik is easy-going and atmospheric. Not for Levi the highly-strung delivery we hear from Rattle, for example. The mood here is essentially optimistic and provides a splendid curtain-raiser to the last movement. Perhaps it does miss the unforgettable nostalgia for sick Vienna in the early 20th century that Abbado and Horenstein manage, but it's a small point when you take the movement in context with Levi's performance of the preceding Scherzo where he manages again to reconcile many disparate elements. Here the marking is "Shadowy" and Levi manages that very well but also crucially gets his orchestra to reveal a lot of inner detail, no doubt helped by the engineers. Maybe he could have pressed forward a little harder so that the extraordinary effects Mahler indulges in could have told even more than they do.

This symphony is a journey out of the various shades of darkness and what they mean and then into the light - night and the return of day where day blazes in with the last movement all fanfares, percussion and dances in profusion. There is an interpretation which sees this movement as something deeper, more sinister, but I don't think that's applicable here as Levi takes the orthodox view: day bringing release and new life. Michael Kennedy has said that a great performance of the Seventh will be crowned by this movement and so it is with Levi. However, it's important to say that he proves the conductor doesn't need to go "hell-for-leather" in order to create the energy the movement needs. Marginally, when compared with other conductors, Levi holds back a tad and relies on the rhythmic kicks written into the music to keep things going. In short, he takes the movement seriously, with clear evidence of careful preparation and what must have been thorough rehearsal. A concert performance did precede this studio recording and I think it benefited from that. The result is a sense of momentum that builds so that, in the closing pages, the work now ending delivers a rare, life-enhancing optimism that completes a rounded interpretation of Mahler's most challenging work.

The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra acquit themselves superbly in all departments and the engineers provide one of the most satisfying orchestral recordings I have heard in a long time, perfectly suited to this work. With Yoel Levi's superb interpretation, this new recording is a real contender in a crowded market.

Reviewer

Tony Duggan

Performance:

Sound:


See also Tony Duggan's comparative reviews of the Mahler Symphonies


Reviewer

Tony Duggan

Performance:

Sound:


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