It is some years since the Wiener 
          Philharmoniker has played in London repertoire for which it is unrivalled 
          – and, indeed, this performance of Bruckner’s Fifth provided ample opportunity 
          to hear a peerlessly played and peerlessly conducted performance of 
          the work. That this concert took place at all in the circumstances, 
          the orchestra’s larger instruments having been delayed by a traffic 
          accident en route to the Festival Hall, added a sense of tension to 
          the evening. In the event, the concert started 40 minutes later than 
          scheduled and, presumably without any rehearsal time available, orchestra 
          and conductor threw caution to the wind and gave us an utterly memorable 
          account of the symphony spellbinding for both its beauty and tautness. 
          Haitink, unusually, conducted without a score – it was certainly on 
          his stand but remained resolutely closed throughout the 75 minutes of 
          the performance.
        
        Bernard Haitink has always taken 
          a somewhat swift view of this symphony and this performance was no exception. 
          Weingartner wrote of Bruckner’s symphonies as being comprised of "mighty 
          columns, magnificent capitals and massive entablature" yet despite 
          Haitink’s driven tempi this was exactly the impression he gave of the 
          work. Details of beauty were unquestionably observed as was a compelling 
          dynamic range, only ever really heard with this orchestra, but also 
          evident was a towering architectural range, especially in the vast Finale 
          which was delivered with monumental power. 
        
        That pin-point dynamic range, 
          which only the Wiener Philharmoniker seems able to project in the dry 
          acoustic of the Festival Hall, began with the equivocal counterpoint 
          of the opening movement, the bass figure semi-mysterious beneath the 
          softer string line rising above it. The blaze of woodwind (so distinctively 
          voiced even during the tuttis) and golden-toned brass which precede 
          the transition to the allegro were never over-balanced with Haitink 
          restraining horns, trombones and trumpets sufficiently to allow the 
          woodwind to be heard. Tremolo strings were bowed with an unmatched fervour 
          and unanimity of phrasing and the inner conflict between B flat and 
          D, which gives the movement an unsettling change of mood, resided beside 
          playing of transcendental starkness.
        
        That mood of starkness also opened 
          the Adagio with supremely bleak oboe playing hovering above pizzicato 
          strings, and Haitink’s beat of the 6/4 metre establishing the root tension 
          which underlies the searing melody of the main theme which twice enters 
          but is twice overcome. The first entry of that glorious melody was not 
          only stunning for the breadth which Haitink established, it was also 
          stunning for the incandescent tone the Vienna strings breathed into 
          the performance with violins, violas and ‘cellos offering sumptuous 
          playing. When the theme is recalled towards the end of the movement 
          basses and ‘cellos rode effortlessly beneath the soaring violin line. 
          If tempi were liquid they never sounded rushed. 
        
        If the Scherzo retained an element 
          of classical balance - between the Ländler-like opening section 
          and the contrast of the Trio – then the Finale was rigorously precise 
          in the manner of economy. Some conductors can seem overawed by Bruckner’s 
          orchestration overemphasising the organ-like qualities of the fugue 
          and chorale conclusion so detail becomes obscured. Not so Haitink, who 
          retained the arc of expansivity and tension by allowing the instrumentation 
          to reveal itself with almost vocal clarity. The fugue, not rushed fiercely 
          as some have done, was made electric by the skill with which Haitink 
          persuaded the Wiener Phiharmoniker to realise the passion of the music, 
          bringing it closer to Beethoven in doing so with its hymnal quality 
          utterly realised. The chorale itself was delivered with exhilarating 
          control and breathtaking phrasing, tremolo strings sounding almost agitated 
          against the refulgent splendour of the Viennese brass.
        
        This superb performance – so faultless 
          in so many ways – showcased a great orchestra and great conductor working 
          symbiotically to realise the vision of one of the greatest of all composers. 
          That in itself is rare enough, but coupled with the supreme quality 
          of this concert it makes the prospect of hearing Haitink with the orchestra 
          again in London (next year as part of his 75th birthday celebrations) 
          a mouth-watering one. 
        
        Marc Bridle
        
        Bernard Haitink will conduct at 
          the Barbican next year, between April and November, concerts with the 
          Royal Concertgebouw, Berliner Philharmoniker, Wiener Philharmoniker, 
          Dresden Staatskapelle and London Symphony Orchestra as part of his 75th 
          birthday concert series. Details at www.barbican.org.uk