BEETHOVEN Symphony No 9 (Jordan)
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Ludwig van Beethoven
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Wiener Symphoniker
Magazine Review Date: 12/2019
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 63
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: WS017
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphony No. 9, 'Choral' |
Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer
Anja Kampe, Conductor Burkhard Fritz, Tenor Daniela Sindram, Mezzo soprano Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer Philippe Jordan, Conductor René Pape, Bass Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra Vienna Singverein |
Author: Richard Osborne
Orchestras differ, of course, as do acoustics, obliging any conductor to modify and adapt. Rarely, though, has there been so swift and distinct a change as here with Jordan’s view of the Ninth. Where his Paris Ninth was measured, grounded and humane, this 2017 Vienna performance tends towards the fast and the faceless. This is especially noticeable in the finale. The newer account has the better choir but the performance, so life-affirming in Paris, emerges (not for the first time in history) with the kind of dead-behind-the-eyes joylessness of a totalitarian hymn.
One can see how Jordan might have looked back at his Paris performance and thought the first movement lacked impetus. Yet this is not a problem that’s solved simply by pressing the accelerator to the floor. In this Vienna performance, the opening Allegro ma non troppo, un poco maestoso is taken at an implausibly fast crotchet=82, as opposed to the crotchet=72 76 which wiser counsels (including Jordan himself in 2015) advise if it’s dramatic edge you seek.
As Jordan acknowledges, the metronomes are a problem throughout the Ninth. It didn’t need Stravinsky to point out the nonsense of the slow movement markings, where Adagio molto is marked 60 and Andante moderato 63: both, in any case, far too fast. Furtwängler used to take 30/40, Toscanini 36/48, the two pulses nicely proportionate. Jordan is currently 56/60.
Love the movement or loathe it, so rapid a tempo subverts both its purpose and its mood. As the poet writes, ‘What is life if, full of care / We have no time to stand and stare?’. In Paris Jordan gave us that time; in Vienna he doesn’t.
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