Chaos reigned in London on the evening that Andris Nelsons was at the Royal Festival Hall to conduct the Philharmonia in Bruckner’s Symphony No. 5 in B flat major. In the middle of rush hour, an unexploded World War II bomb was being dealt with, shutting down tube stations, bridges and roads. Happily, the start of the concert was delayed, but the bomb discovery offered an amusingly apt backdrop to the performance. Like the Thames bomb, the Fifth lay submerged and inert for years; composed in 1875-1876, it didn’t make its first outing until 1894 under the baton of Franz Schalk in his mutilated edition that had substantial re-orchestrations and a gutted (almost blasphemously so) Finale. It is generally believed that the composer did not approve Schalk’s musical graffiti - done in the name of ‘accessibility’ – but it became the standard working edition until Haas and Nowak produced their own versions in 1935 and 1952. The Fifth now stands as a symbol of Bruckner’s originality; the fugal writing in the fourth movement is arguably some of the most complex composition of its time.
Nelsons is one of the top conductors in music of this period (crossing the river from the Royal Opera House where he is currently conducting Der Rosenkavalier) and wrought a majestic sound from the Philharmonia. Pizzicati, a strong feature in the Fifth, were elegant, particularly thoughtful as the symphony opened. Silvery playing from the strings blended unusually well with the rest of the orchestra; it’s always a pleasant surprise when a conductor is able to bring out the best of the brass in Bruckner without completely overwhelming everything else, and Nelsons did this exceptionally well. Woodwind playing was taut and energetic; the clarity of their responses in dialogue with strings was particularly appreciable. Nelsons closed the first movement with a burgeoning intensity that saw the strings sweeping against brass that seemed cheerfully triumphal – a well-developed conclusion.