This magnificent concert in the vast Abbey of the monastery at Ebrach celebrated the 25th year of the Ebrach Summer of Music. It was testimony to the extraordinary achievement of conductor Gerd Schaller whose inspiration is at the heart of the festival, and an exemplary demonstration of the virtues that have led to its increasing renown. Amongst well known works of the orchestral repertoire, the concerts have featured many works by classical and romantic composers that one rarely has the opportunity to hear, and over the past decade the works of Bruckner have also occupied a central place in the programming.
But Bruckner's setting of Psalm 146 is virtually unknown, the score only published in an edition by Paul Hawkshaw in 1996. It is a large scale work for soloists, double choir and orchestra, an ambitious cantata lasting about half an hour. But there is no mention of it anywhere in Bruckner's correspondence, nothing in any memoirs, no information about what occasion might have led him to write it, no performance in his lifetime. And listening to it, you wonder if indeed it is his music at all, it is so unlike his later sacred choral works, much more like Mendelssohn. But it is Bruckner: we have the composition score in his hand and a fair copy with his emendations all over it, which looks to have been written in the late 1850s, a decade before any of the numbered symphonies were to appear. Obscure it may be, but it could receive no more compelling advocacy than that provided by Maestro Schaller and the choir, soloists and orchestra assembled in the abbey for this jubilee concert.
The work opens with a slow hallelujah and song of praise in hushed tones from the choir, above which the soprano soloist floats melodic phrases. It was immediately apparent what a treat we were in for, the Munich Philharmonic Choir singing with confidence and precision, the orchestral tone rich, and the soprano soloist – who was required to play a major and very challenging role in both this evening's works – sang with such glorious beauty of tone, such intelligent and expressive shaping of her words and music, that the appeal of this strangely forgotten work became irresistible. I draw attention to Ania Vegry's singing because it was especially wonderful, but the other three soloists were also first class, the tenor and bass revealed as clear, forthright and expressive singers in the recitatives that follow the opening hallelujah, and Franziska Gottwald's rich, dark alto complemented her colleagues to perfection in the Arioso. The choir storm in, singing of the greatness of God, his power and wisdom: the attack, the vigour, the sheer vitality of the performance was superb, virtues displayed to even greater effect in the extraordinary fugue that closes the work.