Bruckner,
Symphony No. 5
Lucerne
Festival Orchestra, conduced by Claudio Abbado
Accentus DVD
ACC 20243
This DVD of
a live performance from the 2011 Lucerne Festival is truly a gem. Claudio
Abbado’s conducting style is minimal, shaping the music with great economy of
gesture, but he is clearly in tune with his hand-picked and carefully nurtured
summer orchestra and their collective understanding of Bruckner’s complex 5th
symphony is deep indeed.
Abbado
presents a highly articulated performance, bringing out the overall
architecture with great clarity. The clarity extends, moreover, to the musical
texture. Even in the tutti the different voices emerge distinctly – no small
feat in the highly contrapuntal last movement, particularly in the coda where
key themes and motifs and superimposed upon each other.
There is a
real sense of a taut musical argument running through the symphony, with a
running dialogs in each movement between the themes and motifs, and between the
different voices and instrumental groups. In fact, Abbado brings out a feature
of the 5th symphony that emerges in relatively few performances. In
many ways the symphony is an argument of moods – challenge in the fanfares,
grandeur in the chorales, intermittent hesitation (in the short woodwind motifs,
for example), and lilting dances, all juxtaposed with the extraordinary
lyricism that emerges in the Adagio and elsewhere.
The sound
quality is very good and the videography brings out the structure of the
symphony and the details of the interpretation, rather than detracting from
them and breaking the flow (as sometimes occurs). My only minor quibble is the rather breathless program notes. But this is a deeply satisfying
DVD, highly recommended.
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