If you’re looking for modern equivalents of Renaissance Man, look no further than Leonard (actually born Louis) Bernstein: educator and pedagogue, animator and conductor, political activist and campaigner, pianist and composer. How appropriate therefore that Sir Antonio Pappano, conducting the Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia from Rome, chose to pair Bernstein’s First Symphony with Mahler’s First, since it was Bernstein who more than anybody else initiated the Mahler Renaissance back in the 1960s.
The previous evening Esa-Pekka Salonen had transitioned seamlessly from Webern to Mahler. That worked. Pappano’s choice of a bleeding chunk of Haydn with which to open his concert and then segue immediately into the following piece, with his soloist already in her place from the start, didn’t. Here there was no stylistic connection and no obvious liturgical link either, since Bernstein’s Jeremiah is all about what he called his “crisis of faith”. Early on in that first movement, marked Largamente, a sense of anguish is quickly established, thus forming a thematic bridge to what was to follow. Supported by his excellent horns, weighty strings and precise but never aggressively assertive lower brass, the repeated cries of despair were emphatically delivered by Pappano.
The middle movement, the quickest of the three and brightly optimistic in mood, is as close as you’ll get to neo-classical Stravinsky, with energy and controlled power driving the skipping figurations for strings and wind. Towards the end the unashamedly Romantic Bernstein allows himself the luxury of wearing his heart on his sleeve and Pappano rightly drew out the emotional quality of the music. As he and his impressive soloist Elizabeth DeShong also did in the third and longest of the movements, the Lamentation, which forms the heart of this symphonic piece with its Hebrew text detailing the cry of Jeremiah as he mourns for his beloved Jerusalem, now ruined, pillaged and dishonoured. DeShong’s dark, smoky tones together with the richness of her upper and lower registers gave this Lamentation an extraordinary operatic-like power, heard to particular advantage in her impassioned fortissimo outburst at “Súru tamē, karu lamo, súru, súru, al tiga-u!”.
Pappano’s Rome orchestra is an unquestionably fine ensemble. It has strings which in their sweetness and succulence recall the painter Paolo Veronese, an amazingly reliable and softly expressive horn section, wind players that can create bubbling sounds like those produced in a gently simmering pot and a brass section that regards reticence as a virtue. Even at full-pelt in the loudest phases of Mahler’s First Symphony, this orchestra never sounded raucous. Above all, after more than a decade of close co-operation, Pappano and his players have a marked and instinctive feel for internal balance.