Above: conductor Daniele Gatti
Author: Oberon
Wednesday January 17th, 2018 - This long-awaited Carnegie Hall concert by the Royal Concertgebouw under the baton of Daniele Gatti paired two of my favorite composers - Wagner and Bruckner - and my expectations for the performance were very high indeed. Wagner-starved as my friend Dmitry and I have been in recent seasons, hearing the Prelude to Act III and Good Friday Spell from PARSIFAL was alone reason to anticipate this concert for months in advance. That Bruckner's 9th Symphony would complete the program gave reason to feel this was destined to be a thrilling evening. Both works were played magnificently by this great orchestra, and Maestro Gatti again upheld our esteem for him as one of the greatest conductors of our time.
But in practice - as opposed to in theory - I felt, as the evening progressed, that putting these two masterpieces on the same program didn't work out nearly as well as I'd expected. About midway thru the Bruckner, I felt my interest waning. In attempting to reason it out, I came to this conclusion: Wagner is a great composer, and Bruckner is a very good one. This certainly does not mean that Bruckner's music isn't wonderful, and meaningful. But there's a depth of feeling in Wagner's writing that - for me - eludes Bruckner.
Wagner's two 'Grail' operas - one about the father (PARSIFAL) and the other about the son (LOHENGRIN) - both contain music of other-worldly beauty. The composer wrote: "It is reserved for Art to save the spirit of religion." ["Religion and Art" (1880)]. In these two operas, Wagner's music expresses the inexpressible in ways that make non-believers like myself wonder if we've got it right...or not.
Maestro Gatti's gift for evoking mythic times and places (his Metropolitan Opera AIDAs in 2009 were fascinating in this regard) meant that the music from PARSIFAL performed tonight was truly transportive. As with his Met performances of the Wagner opera in 2013, Gatti's pacing seemed ideal. The gorgeously integrated sound of the Concertgebouw, with its velvety-resonant basses, leads us to Monsalvat, where - with Parsifal's return - the long Winter gives way to Spring. For a blessèd time, we are far from the dismal present, watching the flowers bloom is that legendary realm, as Kundry weeps. Poetry without words.
Bruckner's unfinished 9th symphony impressed me deeply when I first heard it performed live in 2014, and I expected the same reaction tonight. For much of the first movement, I was thoroughly engaged and experiencing the tingles of appreciation that Bruckner's music usually produces. I confess that I like the 'purple' parts of Bruckner's music best, and perhaps my eventual zone-out began with the Scherzo.
In the Adagio, I grew restless; the repetitions became tiresome. A few people got up and left, and others had fallen asleep. I continued to attempt to re-engage with the superb playing and Maestro Gatti's interpretation, but honestly I could not wait for the symphony to end; and I made a mental note to skip an upcoming performance of it.
The irony of tonight's situation struck me as I was pondering the experience on the train going home. How is it that Wagner, a non-believer, is able to put us in touch with the divine whereas the pious Bruckner, a devout Catholic who dedicated the 9th symphony "To God", seems only to be knocking on heaven's door?
Now, more than ever, I look forward to the upcoming PARSIFAL performances at The Met.
~ Oberon