Having previously been Assistant Conductor at The Hallé, André de Ridder returned to a bitterly cold Manchester to conduct a fascinating programme, culminating a beautifully autumnal account of Brahms’ Symphony no.4.
The Brahms was by far the most successful of the evening’s works. De Ridder succeeded in incorporating some delightfully rich string playing into a very solid, logical whole. The depth of the string tone perhaps owed something to the placement of the basses at the back of the orchestra. There were some particularly fine moments in the slow movement, where an early transition from pizzicato to arco was handled with sublime gentleness, dawning into view with golden colours. At times the finale lost a small degree of clarity beneath the sea of legato, but the details were rarely missed and the colourfulness of the playing gave much to the performance.
The high-quality string playing also lent contrast to some fine wind playing. In the first movement the wind interjections felt quite volatile, full of tightly coiled energy, against the deep legato of the strings. Equally in the third movement, the sudden noisy boisterousness was much helped when compared with attractive melodic combinations between, for example, violins and oboe, and also with the preceding legato. The brass were full hope here, in marked contrast to the intense drama they created near the ends of the two outer movements.
De Ridder provided some nice personal touches, for example in giving a sense of space and fresh air to the woodwinds’ major key theme in the first movement. He seemed to have a very clear plan for the symphony and succeeded in drawing out a superb string sound. The result was a performance which, though not always the tidiest, was quite memorable for such a frequently-performed work.