Memories of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, 10-5-24. A surprising disappointment

 

Ricochetti with more time than judgment will recall that since October 2019, I have made a hobby of posting classical orchestra music reviews here. This was originally an attempt to train my critical ear for the Mahler Festival, to be held at Amsterdam’s fabled Concertgebouw in May 2020. Just imagine what it would have been! “Ten symphonies played by six orchestras, four of them among the world’s finest. The New York Phil, Royal Concertgebouw, Berlin Phil and Vienna Phil on successive nights. What a show!”

https://ricochet.com/735129/memories-of-the-amsterdam-mahler-festival-may-2020/

Well, you know what happened to that festival. It happened also to the rescheduled 2021 Amsterdam Mahler Festival. In 2023 Leipzig picked up the ball and held a Mahler Festival on similar lines in their Gewandhaus, but my sudden illness kept us from attending. I had to swallow the cost of ten nights’ tickets but was able to trade the airline reservation in for something else. All of this disappointment stopped me from doing concert reviews, otherwise, you lucky people would have read about some spectacular concerts Mrs. Doc Robert and I have heard at Tanglewood these last three summers.

The good Dutchmen, being a persistent people, have scheduled a 2025 Amsterdam Mahler Festival, and, by gum, we will be attending. Thus, I am back to writing about concerts to sharpen my listening ear.

Ten nights in a foreign city with concerts every night is a little daunting, so we agreed to take off one night for a quiet meal out. Toward that end we wanted to hear several Mahler symphonies here in the States before the Festival. We can then skip the one that we find least impressive. I heard the 2nd in New York in June, done by the Philharmonic (very impressive, can’t wait to hear it again!); we heard the 4th done by the Boston Symphony (BSO) at Tanglewood in July (ditto); and we will hear the 6th in New York in April done by the Philly O at Carnegie Hall.

On October 5 we drove into Boston to hear the BSO play the most rarely heard of the Mahler corpus, his Symphony 8, called the “Symphony of a Thousand” for the large forces it requires. Neither Mrs. Doc nor I had ever heard the Eighth before, except maybe on CD (I have Vienna Philharmonic under Maazel, but have not heard it in at least 25 years, if ever).  When we saw the BSO had programmed it, we deliberately did not seek out a YouTube performance so we could experience it “in the raw flesh,” as it were.  We did the same thing when we first heard the Verdi Requiem in 2014 and found the live performance to be an overwhelming experience.

It was a difficult night. The drive from Springfield, MA was troublesome—the Mass Pike being more congested than usual (a BSO musician once told me that any member would forgive you for being late if you roll your eyes and say “Mass Pike”). We were also delayed by Mrs. Doc Robert, who of late requires a walker, getting lost on the street outside Symphony Hall while I parked, we had to use our cell phones to find one another. So we arrived at the hall for our nominal 6:30 dining reservation at 7:15 for an 8:00 concert. But we managed to get through the buffet line in good time and were off to claim our seats with ten minutes to spare.

I won’t bore you with a moment-by-moment review. Suffice it to say that the Eight Symphony, which was here performed by only about 400 musicians (mostly singers), came up surprisingly short. When I say that, remember that Mahler himself, the finest orchestral composer of his time, considered the Eighth to be one of his finest works, although he never heard the Ninth, nor the Song of the Earth (in my mind his finest work), nor the unfinished Tenth.

The Eighth has two halves. The first recalls the Second and Third Symphonies’ first movements, being heavy on the brass, yet having infinitely delicate interludes in its 25 minutes. At first the choir intones a Pentecost hymn, “Veni creator spiritus,” over a bellowing organ and full orchestra with screaming winds and brass. The orchestration is lush, the music is powerful, the playing superb. There were moments, including the very opening and closing of the movement, that just blew us away. I make no criticism of what the BSO did with it that night.

There were some really wonderful aspects to the performance. One was that the children’s boy choir was placed in the lower balcony on one side. One soprano soloist was placed high up in the other balcony, along with a brass choir. Putting musicians around the hall like this always invigorates a performance. The eight vocal soloists included Christine Goerke, Ryan Speedo Green and Ying Fang, all of them operatic superstars, and they sang their hearts out.

A flaw in the performance is that Symphony Hall was just too small for the required forces (large orchestra, three keyboards, 8 vocal soloists, an offstage brass band, two adult choirs, children’s choir).  The audience space was reduced by over 100 seats to extend the stage—and still, the double choir barely had room to stand in the center rear.  The left-right antiphonal effects were thus sacrificed.  It would have been better to perform this on the larger Tanglewood stage, with one choir on the left of the orchestra and the other on the right.

The second half is an hour’s quasi-operatic treatment of the legend of Faust. Why Mahler chose to present these as one work and not as two is beyond me. The shift in tone, language (Latin to German–imagine the choir’s difficulties!) and attitude was a little bewildering. But, hey, he was a professional composer and I’m only an amateur critic.

This half just fell flat for Mrs. Doc and me. The music, not the performance, was at fault. We found the melodies too banal and the form too repetitive.  The BSO did a fine job of it. There were outstanding solos from oboe, cello and horn; there was exquisite string sectional playing; there were arresting moments in the brasses (especially when the offstage band came in near the end).  But it never moved us.  An hour of repetitive banality—no matter how well sung and played—is still an hour poorly spent.

We were not the only ones to think so. A law professor friend who attended the performance felt so too. The audience, however, did not. The applause on the enormous closing chord was immediate, enthusiastic and sustained. There were flowers for the singers and bows galore for the BSO principals.  The critics were much kinder on the piece than I have been above.

We drove home in a better mood, having learned something about navigating city streets with a walker and having some good news. This news is that we now know which night to take off in Amsterdam: it will be May 16th, the night of the Eighth Symphony.

 

For photos of the concert, including one that will leave Elmer Fudd fans laughing, go to:

https://www.classical-scene.com/2024/10/05/eighth-triumph/)

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/10/05/arts/boston-symphony-orchestra-mahler/

https://www.classicalwcrb.org/show/the-boston-symphony-orchestra/2024-08-15/nelsons-the-bso-and-mahlers-monumental-symphony-of-a-thousand

 

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

For my earlier reviews:

https://ricochet.com/723270/memories-of-the-boston-symphony-1-11-20-and-of-the-metropolitan-opera-1-18-20/

https://ricochet.com/1002622/classical-music-is-back/

https://ricochet.com/1330264/notes-on-the-us-marine-corps-band-concerts-october-2022/

https://ricochet.com/701989/death-of-a-maestro/

https://ricochet.com/700496/memories-of-the-los-angeles-philharmonic-11-23-19/

https://ricochet.com/697094/memories-of-the-chicago-symphony-orchestra-11-15-19-and-of-the-metropolitan-opera-11-16-19/

https://ricochet.com/696987/memories-of-the-bavarian-radio-symphony-orchestra-11-9-19/

https://ricochet.com/692796/memories-of-the-leipzig-gewandhaus-orchestra-10-29-19/

https://ricochet.com/689120/memories-of-the-philadelphia-orchestra-10-17-19/

https://ricochet.com/683939/why-we-need-people-who-have-too-much-money/

https://ricochet.com/684177/memories-of-the-cleveland-orchestra-10-4-19/

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There are 14 comments.

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  1. Hoyacon Member
    Hoyacon
    @Hoyacon

    This is wonderful.  Thanks.

    For a second I thought it might be about my local group, the underrated “other” BSO in Baltimore, but Mahler is not (usually?) in their repertoire.

    • #1
  2. Arahant Member
    Arahant
    @Arahant

    I never really got the hang of using a walker when I had to. Luckily, in my case, it was relatively short term.

    I hope you enjoy the festival.

    • #2
  3. MWD B612 "Dawg" Member
    MWD B612 "Dawg"
    @danok1

    Thanks for this, Doc. I’ve never really listened to Mahler. I’ll have to give him a try.

    • #3
  4. Painter Jean Moderator
    Painter Jean
    @PainterJean

    Thank you for this! I’m not familiar with Mahler’s 8th, and now I will certainly listen to see if my reaction is the same as yours.

    • #4
  5. Doctor Robert Member
    Doctor Robert
    @DoctorRobert

    MWD B612 "Dawg" (View Comment):

    Thanks for this, Doc. I’ve never really listened to Mahler. I’ll have to give him a try.

    Hoyacon and Arahant, thank you for your comments. Painter Jean, please tell us what you think.  It seems odd that people as steeped in classical music culture as Mrs Doc Robert and I would have such contrarian opinions of the piece.

    Hoyacon, I changed the title for you, and you missed the Sixth in Baltimore: https://www.bsomusic.org/this-week-at-the-bso-music-director-jonathon-heyward-conducts-mahlers-tragic-sixth-symphony/

    MWD, are you a classical music fan already?  For a newbie, start with the Mahler song cycles and work into the symphonies.  Songs of a Wayfarer are melodious and folksy.  They lead naturally to the First symphony, which quotes two of them at length.   The Kindertodenleider are dark, as their name (“Songs on the death of children”) implies but very, very beautiful.  Listen to how Mahler uses a little bell in the first and last songs to unify the piece.  The Ruckert songs are exalting.  The Youth’s Magic Horn (“Wunderhorn”) songs come in every mood.

    All of the songs exist in orchestral and piano versions.  They are all worth hearing.

    Of the symphonies, the First is the most approachable followed by 4, 5, 2 and 3.  Six, 7, 9 and 10 are for real fans.   Nine is particularly emotional.  Five and 4 are my favorites; I did not know 8 until last month.

    Mahler’s best work is a final song cycle, Song of the Earth, essentially his 11th symphony.  Work up to it. It is a demanding piece to hear, as is symphony 6.

    • #5
  6. MWD B612 "Dawg" Member
    MWD B612 "Dawg"
    @danok1

    Doctor Robert (View Comment):

    MWD B612 "Dawg" (View Comment):

    Thanks for this, Doc. I’ve never really listened to Mahler. I’ll have to give him a try.

    Hoyacon and Arahant, thank you for your comments.

    MWD, are you a classical music fan already? For a newbie, start with the Mahler song cycles and work into the symphonies. Songs of a Wayfarer are melodious and folksy. They lead naturally to the First symphony, which quotes one of them at length. The Kindertodenleider are dark, as their name (“Songs on the death of children”) implies. The Ruckert songs are exalting. The Youth’s Magic Horn (“Wunderhorn”)songs come in every mood.

    All of the songs exist in orchestral and piano versions. They are all worth hearing.

    Of the symphonies, the First is the most approachable followed by 4, 5, 2 and 3. Six, 7, 9 and 10 are for real fans.

    His best work is a final song cycle, Song of the Earth. Work up to it. It is a demanding piece to hear, as is symphony 6.

    Thank you. I would say I enjoy classical music but don’t have the in-depth knowledge that you and some other members have.  I know the major works in the repertoire. I’ve been to a few performances of the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra. I can generally tell the general styles of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, etc. And thus there are gaps in composers listened to/works known. The list above will be very helpful.

    • #6
  7. thelonious Member
    thelonious
    @thelonious

    Mahler was a favorite of Leonard Bernstein. I’ve heard it said that Mahler would still be an obscure composer if it weren’t for Bernstein. I don’t know if that’s true. His works are pretty epic. Hope you have a great time in Amsterdam.

    • #7
  8. Doctor Robert Member
    Doctor Robert
    @DoctorRobert

    thelonious (View Comment):

    Mahler was a favorite of Leonard Bernstein. I’ve heard it said that Mahler would still be an obscure composer if it weren’t for Bernstein. I don’t know if that’s true. His works are pretty epic. Hope you have a great time in Amsterdam.

    Thelonius, that’s what the common wisdom says.  It makes sense for our century.  Bernstein was an acolyte of Bruno Walter, who was himself an acolyte of Mahler.  Walter prepared the vocal soloists for the first performance (see link below).

    But Mahler was a Big Deal in his own time, a classical music rock star who was discussed in the society pages and arts sections alike.  The premiere of the Eighth, in Munich, attracted a sold out house of 3200 souls.  It was a rousing success.

    Mahler would die of streptococcal endocarditis 8 months later, for want of a dollar’s worth of penicillin.

    https://mahlerfoundation.org/mahler/locations/germany/munich/1910-concert-munich-12-09-1910/

    The story is told of a Bernstein NY Phil tour of Europe which presented alternating nights of the Mahler 6 and 7, that so schizophrenic a program took a toll on the conductor and orchestra alike.  I have heard the same story told about the BSO under Seiji Ozawa by a trombonist who claimed to have participated, so I am not sure if the Bernstein story is apocryphal.  Chicago Symphony is playing the 6th and 7th at the Amsterdam festival,  they are making a tour of it alternating these pieces throughout Central European cities.

    • #8
  9. Gary McVey Contributor
    Gary McVey
    @GaryMcVey

    There’s a tremendous amount of care, devotion, attention to detail and raw intellectual horsepower on display in this post. It’s about a subject–classical music–that many of us love but so few of us can be so articulate as to why. Thank you, Doctor Robert. 

    • #9
  10. Doug Watt Member
    Doug Watt
    @DougWatt

    Our grandson who is now 14 is still taking piano lessons. This recital is not Mahler, and he was 12 years old in this video.

    • #10
  11. The Reticulator Member
    The Reticulator
    @TheReticulator

    Doug Watt (View Comment):

    Our grandson who is now 14 is still taking piano lessons. This recital is not Mahler, and he was 12 years old in this video.

    If he’s still playing Rach music and it gets posted to YouTube, be sure to let us know! 

    • #11
  12. James Lileks Contributor
    James Lileks
    @jameslileks

    Great post! I heard the Minnesota Orchestra do the 8th, and the end of the second movement, in person, had such power it made the faces of people in the back row ripple like they were experiencing G-forces. I mean, Beethoven heard it, and he was deaf and dead. 

    • #12
  13. thelonious Member
    thelonious
    @thelonious

    Just saw the 8th conducted by Leonard Bernstein and the NY Philharmonic on You Tube. The man works up a good sweat. He doesn’t quite sweat on the level of a Moses Malone or Patrick Ewing but he still sweats in a pretty dramatic fashion. The 8th throws a lot at you and can be a little overbearing. I find that with a lot of Romantic era works. It’s like just too many notes and too many instruments throwing licks at me man. The 8th does have a strong emotional impact even though it can be a bit much.

    • #13
  14. Doctor Robert Member
    Doctor Robert
    @DoctorRobert

    How odd that James and thelonious had such a different reaction to the Eighth than did Dr and Mrs Doc Robert.  A work of art can be many things to many people.

    What James noted about the volume of the “enormous closing chord” was true in Boston too.  We found it a little too much. Picky, picky, picky.

    • #14
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