Gustav Mahler, Blumine
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra
Hannu Lintu, conductor
Mahler’s First Symphony is often recorded and issued on its
own. Generous record companies have occasionally partnered it with the Songs of a Wayfarer, which makes good
musical sense given the role of the second song in the first movement. Another
(less logical) option is the first movement of the Tenth. A quick survey of the
162 recordings available on Archiv Musik suggests that the Blumine movement, included
as the second of five movements for the first four performances of the symphony,
is not as widely adopted as one might imagine. But it is the chosen pairing on
David Zinman’s 2007 recording and quite a few others, including this very good SACD
recording from Hannu Lintu and the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, issued by
Ondine. Blumine makes an excellent filling, delightful in its own right and
also giving us a much clearer sense of the symphony as Mahler originally
conceived it.
Lintu opts, like Zinman, to add Blumine as an optional
extra, rather than present the First in its original five movement form. This
is the right call, I think. Mahler’s judgment seems to have been more secure
than Bruckner’s in evaluating early versions. Blumine is a charming piece that
deserves to be played, but including definitely breaks the continuity between
the opening movement and the scherzo.
Michael Steinberg quotes from a letter Mahler wrote to the
conductor Schalk in which he says: “In the first movement the greatest
delicacy throughout”. Lintu’s approach is entirely in line with this. He sets
the stage with very precise playing in the opening minutes before the
transition to the Wayfarer theme. Favoring delicacy over boisterousness makes
the climax at the end of the movement more telling. The same pattern reappears
in the scherzo, where the end of the movement gains from the relatively
understated playing that precedes it (as well as from the gentle lilt in the
trio).
There is no shortage of recordings of Mahler’s First (in
fact – no shortage of SACD recordings), but this is a very worthy addition to
the field, more convincing to my ear than the recent DVD/Blu-Ray live
performance from Paavo Järvi and the Frankfurt Radio Symphony (see here
for my review of Järvi’s cycle). Recommended.
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