I'm amazed no-one has yet commented on Messiaen's Et exspecto, which had an astounding immediacy, clarity and impact on the HD-Hi 320kbps stream. Musical and sonic judgement have to partner each other here, and Chailly paced it perfectly, allowing it to breathe, to state, restate, and then deliver its stunningly physical crescendi without restraint, but with a gleaming definitional edge. At the peaks of the biggest drum and tam-tam rolls in the 3rd section, I could feel the chair vibrate with the resonance itself, not just the power (I don't run floorstanders or subwoofer). Remarkable both as primordial music and sophisticated engineering.
In the Mahler 6 the balance changed to a smaller orchestral image in a more distanced perspective.
Chailly reminded me a little of Kubelik's way with Mahler in his Bavarian Radio cycle - eschewing late-Romantic rhetoric or rich sonorities for a swift, light and lithe momentum which reserves power for the truly significant moments in a far-sighted view of the symphony's architecture. So in (i), the sharpened blades of the brass made their point the more tellingly at the start of the development and in the coda, but Chailly was careful not to be too cock-a-hoop here, though it's easy to forgive those who are!
This approach was consistent through a flowing andante, the clear melodic streams tumbling into a great waterfall of a climax; the scherzo, at first almost unnervingly fast and lightweight, careering into devilish violence.
In the finale I did begin to miss greater textural presence - sheer guttiness - in the strings, which were sometimes lost in the huge climaxes either side of the hammer blows, but Chailly will never impose himself on the score with a surprise of tempo or quirk of phrase; his classically-disciplined approach is always about the formal unity, placing the main climaxes unerringly with a coolly ruthless power. The coda sounded properly ashen, exhausted; the silence after the close wholly a part of the experience.
Two details:
First, why do almost all conductors leave out the 3rd hammer-blow, despite Mahler's un-musical reasons for deleting it? He was traumatized by what was happening to his life, but it would respect his creation more to restore it. In place it is devastating - and true.
Personally, I feel at odds with the andante-scherzo order; it seems to impose a conventional shape on the piece which runs against its emotional trajectory. The scherzo belongs to the allegro as its distorting mirror; the andante says, "if only it could be like this"; the finale gives us the unconditional answer.
In the Mahler 6 the balance changed to a smaller orchestral image in a more distanced perspective.
Chailly reminded me a little of Kubelik's way with Mahler in his Bavarian Radio cycle - eschewing late-Romantic rhetoric or rich sonorities for a swift, light and lithe momentum which reserves power for the truly significant moments in a far-sighted view of the symphony's architecture. So in (i), the sharpened blades of the brass made their point the more tellingly at the start of the development and in the coda, but Chailly was careful not to be too cock-a-hoop here, though it's easy to forgive those who are!
This approach was consistent through a flowing andante, the clear melodic streams tumbling into a great waterfall of a climax; the scherzo, at first almost unnervingly fast and lightweight, careering into devilish violence.
In the finale I did begin to miss greater textural presence - sheer guttiness - in the strings, which were sometimes lost in the huge climaxes either side of the hammer blows, but Chailly will never impose himself on the score with a surprise of tempo or quirk of phrase; his classically-disciplined approach is always about the formal unity, placing the main climaxes unerringly with a coolly ruthless power. The coda sounded properly ashen, exhausted; the silence after the close wholly a part of the experience.
Two details:
First, why do almost all conductors leave out the 3rd hammer-blow, despite Mahler's un-musical reasons for deleting it? He was traumatized by what was happening to his life, but it would respect his creation more to restore it. In place it is devastating - and true.
Personally, I feel at odds with the andante-scherzo order; it seems to impose a conventional shape on the piece which runs against its emotional trajectory. The scherzo belongs to the allegro as its distorting mirror; the andante says, "if only it could be like this"; the finale gives us the unconditional answer.
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