This was the second of a triptych of concerts in Baden-Baden centred around the Russian cellist Mischa Maisky, who played here with the Bamberger Symphoniker and Jonathan Nott in an all-Dvořák programme.
Dvořák's Cello Concerto in B minor is his final large-scale orchestral canvas, and justly celebrated as one of his finest achievements. It is by some distance the most often-performed cello concerto, and after having heard it Brahms was famously reported to have said: "If only I had known such a concerto was possible for the cello, I would have tried it myself". Other stories about its inception and composition are repeated endlessly in programme notes: that Dvořák had recently visited the Niagara falls and proclaimed that it would become a Symphony in B minor; that the second movement contains a reference to "Lass mich allein", the favourite song of his first love Josefina Čermakova, who during its composition Dvořák had discovered was seriously ill; that on learning of Josefina's death, Dvořák substantially altered the finale, providing it with the most wistful and achingly beautiful coda he ever composed, before its triumphant major climax.
Even without these painful personal details, we would sense the unusually intimate and personal nature of this concerto, its autumnal warmth and nostalgic glow quite alien to the traditional romantic view of the concerto. Of course, it is also a grand symphonic statement in itself, magnificent even by Dvořák's standards, with his gift as a melodist and mastery as an orchestrator both as evident and consummate as ever.
After the extended orchestral introduction with its gorgeous horn solo, here gloriously played, Maisky entered so violently that the quality of his tone was seriously compromised. The second subject also lacked beauty, as here (and throughout) Maisky failed to deliver a convincing legato, instead choosing to emphasise and underline individual notes with accents, tenutos and portatos of his own divising. His vibrato also marred the line by being alternately extremely wide, and then almost non-existent. In a quixotic choice, he opted to use the passagework originally notated by Dvořák, which survives still in sketches and one of the manuscripts, rather than the standard passagework devised by Dvořák's cellist friend Hanuš Wihan and approved by Dvořák before publication (after Dvořák had very firmly denied many other suggestions from Wihan). As a result of these mannerisms and interventions, the performance was rendered devoid of true feeling and the overarching form of the work was lost. Beautiful woodwind solos from the orchestra notwithstanding, Nott was unable to save this from becoming what felt by the end like "the Maisky show".