If Prague Spring glided to a soft finish instead of ending with a bang this year, it was entirely in keeping with the times – and something of a miracle. Amid some of the toughest pandemic restrictions in Europe, the organizers staged 21 concerts (along with two competitions and a masterclass by Garrick Ohlsson), streaming them all free to global viewers. They also managed to open six of the performances to live audiences, including the finale, which featured the first meeting of British conductor Mark Wigglesworth and the Czech Philharmonic.
The results were mixed. Wigglesworth was brilliant in leading two works by Britten: What the Wildflowers Tell Me, an arrangement of the second movement of Mahler’s Third Symphony, and Les Illuminations, a song cycle based on the poetry of Rimbaud. Less impressive was his handling of Beethoven’s Symphony no. 6 in F major, which lacked the clarity of the first half of the program. The real star of the evening was Czech tenor Petr Nekoranec, who delivered the song cycle like he had been singing it all his life.
Wigglesworth has a laid-back conducting style that was a good fit with the orchestra. He likes to meet players halfway in ideas for interpretation, which can sometimes mean getting out of the way and letting them do what they do best. In Wildflowers he showed a light touch, giving the music room to breathe and the orchestra’s natural warmth a chance to blossom. It was like watching someone drive a Cadillac, fine-tuning an already exquisite sound. Light, pleasant and colorful, the piece made a perfect aperitif.
When he needs to be, Wigglesworth is also a skilled technician, as he showed in Les Illuminations. The nine segments traverse a wide range of tempos, moods and dynamics, with nearly every bar packed with fine details. Wigglesworth showed strong command of the material and expert craftsmanship in layering sounds without losing any of the details, giving individual players like concertmaster Jiří Vodička a chance to shine. The buoyancy in the music was remarkable, given the many dramatic demands in the score and the orchestra’s ballast – among its many gifts, the Czech Philharmonic is not known for being particularly nimble.