Vassily Sinaisky returned to the BBC Philharmonic to conclude their 2016-17 season with a floor-shaking performance of Mahler’s monumental second symphony, with all the might of the CBSO Chorus thrown in for the final movement. The work’s last outing in Manchester was in 2011, when the newly-appointed Juanjo Mena conducted the symphony with the same forces. Sinaisky’s reading tonight was a touch less sentimental in the final chorus and a little quicker in overall pacing, putting more emphasis on the shattering cries of the dead in the fifth movement and the stormy first, but lost none of the power of Mena’s account.
There was none of the customary long, meditative pause at the outset of a Mahler symphony, which gave the wild opening growls in the lower strings a breathless sense of immediacy. The funeral march unfolded with an inevitable grimness, interposed with momentary glimpses of the redemptive, rising five-note theme which became subtly brighter as the symphony progressed. The climactic moment, with strings hammering out their triplets Mit dem Bogen geschlagen, as instructed by the composer (to strike the strings with the bow), was stunning.
The second and third movements both carried a lovely sense of grace and lightness of touch in the string playing, perhaps aided in some part by guest leaders of the first violins (Charlotte Scott) and cellos (Joely Koos), both from strong chamber music backgrounds. There was steely resolve too, in the defiant rising horn figures of the Andante, and an indulgently grotesque retelling of the composer’s earlier Wunderhorn song, St Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes.
The first strains of mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnston’s Urlicht appeared from nowhere with a warmly glowing tone and utmost care for the text. Soprano Olena Tokar was similarly excellent in the final movement. Both she and Johnston sang with remarkable control and beautifully rounded sound in all their offerings.