This concert, to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Wagner’s birth, opened with that composer’s most influential phrase – the beginning of the prelude to Tristan und Isolde wherein the Tristan chord, which is reputed to have had such an unsettling effect on the harmonic language of all who followed, first stole upon the ears of 19th-century music lovers. The cellos of the Heidelberg Philharmonic played with full and rich tone, and the charismatic young Bulgarian conductor Yordan Kamdzhalov shaped the phrases to perfection. The Liebestod, bereft of Isolde’s voice and four hours of intervening opera, is never quite what it should be, but Kamdzhalov in the build-up to the climax had the strings playing with such febrile intensity that the resolution hardly discharged the tension created, the excited passion of greater import than the climax toward which it strove.
Eva Vogel (replacing Stella Doufexis at short notice) then took command of the stage to deliver a wonderfully controlled, perceptive and supremely beautiful rendition of Wagner’s setting of the poems of his young friend Mathilde Wesendonck. Two of the settings use music that was to blossom darkly into Tristan und Isolde, but the music we had heard so wildly heated in the Liebestod was here far cooler. The orchestral accompaniment was wonderfully judged, full of soft colour and subtle highlights. Vogel’s was a fabulous performance, a glorious voice presented with clarity and authority.
Survival after falling under Wagner’s spell is a challenge to many musicians. Eva Vogel was somewhat distanced from the pain and longing of Wesendonck’s poetry, not seeming to make the words her own but presenting the Lieder more as glorious music untrammelled by the expression of an unresolved Wagnerian erotic longing. Bruckner’s take on Wagner would also assert a rather pure, very individual view of his “master of all masters”. What was played this evening was Bruckner’s very first version of his Wagner Symphony, a score that only survives because Wagner accepted its dedication and hence received a copy that was preserved at Bayreuth. Programme notes would have you believe that this first version of the symphony is littered with Wagner quotations, but any expectation of leitmotif-spotting will be disappointed: you might just notice a Brucknerian version of the “magic sleep” motive, a hidden melodic phrase from Tristan and a climactic brass theme in the slow movement that sounds a bit like Wagner – and that’s all.
In number of bars, it is Bruckner’s longest work, though Kamdzhalov, remarkably conducting this rarely performed work without a score, seemed at times determined to make it one of the shortest in duration. This led to moments of great excitement, the excellent musicians of the Heidelberg Philharmonic Orchestra required to play towards the limits of their considerable virtuosity. The entire Scherzo was dispatched in just over five minutes, which was certainly a breathtaking white-knuckle ride, but the stamping rhythm of the fortissimo tuttis was in danger of becoming garbled.