The night after a relatively mellow program of Schubert and Bruckner from the Vienna Philharmonic under Herbert Blomstedt, Valery Gergiev and the Munich Philharmonic made a full frontal assault on Shostakovich and Brahms. In fact, Gergiev whipped up such tremendous sounds from his orchestra that the opening Un poco sostenuto of Brahms' First Symphony was so fierce and declamatory that the composer might just as well have stuck with his opening scheme of starting with with the second, Allegro section, which in this case seemed almost like an anti-climax.
It was like a Russian equivalent of Technicolor enhanced by the kind of stunning widespread dimensionality that you usually find only on digitally processed technology like Apple Music's new Spatial Audio. The effects were often hypnotic, with the strings swaying in their chairs and Gergiev's fluttering right hand reminiscent of Wilhelm Furtwängler's iconic conducting style.
Matías Piñeira, principal French horn, was golden and true in a somewhat more reserved Andante sostenuto but the concertmaster's hyper-Romantic playing in his solos had an edge and attitude that was more aligned with notions of ecstasy than Brahmsian notions of tragedy. The generously phrased, open-hearted Un poco allegretto e grazioso moved with wonderful energy and lilt that had the whole string section swaying together at times, and the clarinet solo following the return from the Trio was simple and sublime.
After the brass were eloquent and restrained in their great tune, with a bit of lovely vibrato from the trombone, Gergiev set an initially pedestrian speed for the Finale's big string theme but quickly sped up for the first big tutti statement and the movement played out with increasingly forward energy, highlighted at one point by the contrabassoon entering a nanosecond early. The final brass peroration was finished off by the timpanist, explosive as he had been all night.