The Nash Ensembles' "Echoes of Romanticism" series at the Wigmore Hall, of which this concert was a part, is not really an exploration of romanticism as such, but rather a charting of the rise and fall of Teutonic music between Mozart and Schoenberg. This is a fascinating story to tell, and this evening provided a particular insight into Richard Strauss – a key and particularly divisive figure in this narrative, his career spanning as it did from the highest high-romanticism to the era's last glorious gasps in the perenially celebrated works of his "Indian Summer" period. Wagner and Mozart, his two musical heroes, were each represented by a work which seemed to have a particular bearing or resonance on the Strauss work presented here in excerpts: his final opera Capriccio.
First came Wagner's Siegfried Idyll, in its original intimate chamber incarnation. And the Nash Ensemble showed that it is much to be preferred, the lissome delicacy of each instrumental line and beautiful timbres of the chamber orchestra providing something quite unlike what we are used to with this composer. Wagner as miniaturist! As always on the rare occasions when it happens, I couldn't help but feel what a treat it is to have a double bass in a chamber setting, too – adding depth and breadth to the sound, allowing the treble instruments to sing even more sweetly, and emancipating the cello from its usual role to allow for some gorgeous baritonal melodies. If the piece doesn't quite sustain formal interest in the way that his operas do, we can still be surprised that Wagner can provide us with this gentle confection, so different from anything else in his mature output.
Then, after conducting the first piece, Paul Watkins returned to the stage as a cellist to perform Mozart's C major String Quintet, K515. Dating from 1787, it was composed squarely between his two operatic masterpieces Le Nozze di Figaro and Don Giovanni. Though almost surprisingly dissimilar from either of these pieces in character or sound, the endless boundary-pushing inspiration of this period of Mozart's work is every bit as evident here as in the operas. Perhaps most remarkable in this piece (not to mention apt) is an almost Straussian penchant for delicious harmonic side-slips into distant keys. In the first two movements, Watkins took the clear lead, cajoling the group from the centre of the ensemble, but gradually first violin Stephanie Gonley and first viola Lawrence Power took the reins, trading melodies with each other, as Mozart played constantly with instrumental groupings and alliances. The fact that every member of the Nash Ensemble is a soloist and artist in their own right is part of what makes them such a pleasure to hear, and if the last degree of immediacy and spontaneity was missing here, this was still playing of a very high order.