Saturday night, Avery Fisher Hall saw a solid and well-crafted final performance of Mozart’s Piano Concerto no. 25 and Bruckner’s Symphony no. 3. The piano concerto was cleanly executed and so polished as to allow the Mozartean patina to shine clearly through. Emanuel Ax played with a crisp yet sonorous articulation which seems to be typical of good interpretations of the concerto, and overall played exceedingly well. In utter command of his instrument, Ax dispensed perfectly measured-out gestures, crescendi and decrescendi spooling out to precise levels, sometimes over long phrases, often anticipating the orchestral texture to follow. This anticipation also extended to the interplay between solo piano and full symphonic textures, with Ax sliding the piano lines into position opposite the orchestra, leading the listener into and out from tutti sections with an affective nuance that served Mozart’s style particularly well. The Brendel cadenza – subtle, measured – was in line with the rest of the performance, but I couldn’t help wishing for an ex tempore performance from such a giant of performance as Mr Ax.
Bruckner dedicated his Symphony no. 3 to Wagner, after the latter had expressed a real interest in the work in 1873. It’s not hard to hear a certain affinity to Wagner’s work, but that similarity is often skin-deep (that is, such an affinity is an artifact of the orchestration of the work, rather than structural or formal imitation). In fact, the transparency of the tonal structure throughout the Third Symphony might even be heard as antithetical to Wagner’s chromatic palette.
In performance, the symphony started strong and lingered a bit too long. In its more brass-heavy and fiery moments, the first movement was the best approximation of 19th-century Viennese dubstep this listener has ever encountered – using my lungs as ears was not a sensation I’d expected from the evening. Nestled between these gusts of pathos, however, the cantabile passages seemed a touch saccharine. The Philharmonic does not have a Midas touch, and it’s fair to assume the lighter bits are not nearly as conducive to compelling performance as the heavy, tutti moments.