After beginning their new season at the Southbank Centre with a 70th anniversary gala on the 27th September, the Philharmonia Orchestra continued in style on Thursday night with a concert of two contrasting yet attractive halves; the first pairing Ives and Berg, the second, Schubert’s Symphony no. 9 in C, “The Great”.
Ives’ music is considered to be well ahead of its time. Indeed, The Unanswered Question foreshadows the minimalism of composers like Górecki and Pärt by many years, with slow moving strings providing a mystical backdrop to a querying trumpet and frustrated woodwinds. And yet Christoph von Dohnányi and the Philharmonia also brought a Straussian feel to the piece, linking it very firmly with both the old and the new. Traditionally the strings should be offstage, but given the size of the orchestra’s string section this was likely deemed logistically unwise. Instead the woodwinds were placed facing away from the audience (and their fellow orchestra members) at the top of the stage, while the trumpet sang out from an unseen location off-stage. It was an effective placement, the trumpet’s first question coming from nowhere across the mystical stillness of the strings. The woodwind became more intense with each answer, offering a genuine sense of frustration, before the piece faded back into the ether.
Pairing the Ives with Berg’s Violin Concerto was an inspired choice, both works being full of symbolism and reaching for the beyond. The final work completed before his death, the Violin Concerto is often viewed as a requiem for Berg as well as the dedicatee, Manon Gropius, daughter of Alma Mahler and her second husband, architect Walter Gropius, though it is not the only work of his littered with personal musical references.
Berg is considered the most successful of the Second Viennese School in that he combined twelve-tone music with Romanticism and Viennese traditions. And yet interpretations of his music so often focus on the supposedly more intellectual aspects of serialism and neglect the Romantic who had as much in common with Mahler and Strauss and he did Schoenberg. And so Carolin Widmann and the Philharmonia’s performance was a revelation. Expressive, warm, rich, terrifying, menacing, explosive, even moments of humour; this was a full-blooded exploration of the gamut of human emotion. Dohnányi pulled out textures and opened up the work, showing and communicating a deep understanding of its complexity as well as its expressiveness. Widmann devoured the music with total ardour, switching between warm, rich, dark, lyrical and folky tones with ease. The entry of the chorale melody midway through the second movement felt completely organic, as did its transition to the original Bach realisation on the woodwinds. The melting of the soloist into the main body of the first violins towards the end was particularly lovely too, although as Widmann re-emerged, Dohnányi attempts to quieten the brass weren’t entirely successful, and the rest of the orchestra followed suit, being just a touch too full-bodied by this point as the violin soared to its final, eye-wateringly high celestial end.