SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No 5 WEILL Symphony No 2 (Shani)

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: Warner Classics

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 77

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 9029 54783-4

9029 54783-4. SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No 5 WEILL Symphony No 2 (Shani)

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Symphony No. 5 Dmitri Shostakovich, Composer
Lahav Shani, Conductor
Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra
Symphony No. 2 Kurt (Julian) Weill, Composer
Lahav Shani, Conductor
Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra

An eye- (and ear-) catching coupling. Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony is front and centre of the core repertoire these days – though not always in performances as good as this one – but we rarely hear Kurt Weill’s two symphonies and the Second is a piece of real significance in the musical history of its time, bridging as it does Weill’s two lives in Germany and America.

Indeed, the strident call to arms at the outset of this ‘Symphonic Fantasy’ together with its many pages of motoric urgency come upon us like a metaphor for Weill’s flight from Germany, where the writing was very much on the wall. He wrote the symphony in Paris in 1933‑34 but it is the stark realisation of what he was leaving behind that gives it its imperative, dare I say martial, character. In the lyric contrasts – such as the melody for solo trumpet in the first movement – we can almost hear the accompanying accordion of those celebrated Brechtian street songs, gritty and urban, and the funeral oration for trombone in the oppressive central Largo is unmistakably Weillian and strangely monochromatic like one of those wartime newsreels.

The Israeli conductor Lahav Shani (Principal Conductor of the Rotterdam Philharmonic) is new to me and I am mightily impressed by his lean and taut way with a piece he so clearly holds a special place for in his portfolio. The finale has real teeth, and besides its almost imperceptible transformation into a goose-stepping march one might see the flashes of piccolo as glinting menacingly off Mack the Knife’s switchblade. I personally love the way Weill assimilated himself into American culture and have always felt that his best work in music theatre happened there. Perhaps critics of his concert work did him an unintentional favour. Good to hear this again, though, and better yet to hear it served so well.

But hot on its heels is an account of Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony where the feeling is refreshingly one of rediscovery. From bar one there is an inescapable and unremitting tension. Shani has a wonderful nose for atmosphere and the chilled first subject seems to find its own space in a desolate place. The second subject brings a glimmer of hope and warmth but the theatre of war is soon upon us and Shani’s darkly imposing Rotterdam brass bring home the development thrillingly. There’s more than a touch of the Hebraic in the big unison release here, and the long celesta-flecked coda is mesmerising.

Shani reminds me just how achingly beautiful the slow movement of this piece is. The atmosphere is again distilled and super-spatial, with string-playing that leans wholeheartedly into the harmonic pull of the music – and honestly I don’t think I have ever heard the transition into the hushed final pages sound quite as breathtaking (and that despite some extraneous rustling from the audience).

The much-contested (though not so these days) final pages of the finale are, of course, signalled from brutish march at the outset but Shani takes no prisoners when it comes to ramming home Shostakovich’s hollow victory. The repeated As are possessed of an insanity that it is impossible to misconstrue however much the audience’s cheers would have us think otherwise. A terrific disc.

Discover the world's largest classical music catalogue with Presto Music. 

Stream on Presto Music | Buy from Presto Music

Gramophone Print

  • Print Edition

From £6.67 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Club

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive
  • Reviews Database
  • Full website access

From £8.75 / month

Subscribe

                              

If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.