Jansons’s command of rubato and the music’s ebb and flow of dynamic and pacing is innate, inspiring and spot-on
Geoffrey Norris applauds a magnificent new recording from Mariss Jansons showcasing two of Rachmaninov’s finest scores
Rachmaninov The Bells, Op 35a. Symphonic Dances, Op 45b a Tatiana Pavlovskaya sop aOleg Dolgov ten aAlexey Markov bar Bavarian Radio Symphony aChorus and Orchestra / Mariss Jansons BR-Klassik F 900154 (74’ • DDD • T/t) Recorded live at the Herkulessaal, Munich, aJanuary 14 & 15, 2016; bJanuary 26 & 27, 2017 This superlative performance of Rachmaninov’s choral symphony The Bells is one of those stratospherically accomplished, ‘cosmic’ ones that Jansons says he is always trying to attain. For a long time my benchmark as a conductor of The Bells has been Evgeny Svetlanov. The fact that it was the last work he performed in London shortly before his death in 2002 lends his association with the music an additional, poignant dimension, and the recording of that event with the BBC Symphony Orchestra transmits the passion, intensity and radiant glow that were qualities forever associated with a Svetlanov concert. His 1979 recording with the USSR Symphony Orchestra, which was my top choice in a Gramophone Collection (A/09), is similarly a lasting reminder of his interpretative power and expressive flexibility. Call me obsessive, but I have just found in Moscow a previously unpublished live recording which Svetlanov made in 1958 in the Conservatoire’s Great Hall (SMCCD0157). Well restored and remastered, it is notably quicker than Svetlanov’s later versions but it is still a performance which, as Pushkin said in another context, ‘breathes and reeks of Russia’, with a positively diabolical third movement of alarum bells.
Like Svetlanov, Jansons has Rachmaninov in his very soul; but he is also able to capitalise on his remarkable ear for colour, clarity and atmosphere, coupled with his distinctive energy and probing depth of emotional understanding. His Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, captured at Munich concerts in January 2016, is at its peak; the choir is well drilled, disciplined and red-blooded in the Russian text; and the three PHO T O G R A P H Y
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10 GRAMOPHONE RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR 2018
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