BBC Philharmonic/Wellber review – exceptional beauty, ferocious power

Bridgewater Hall, Manchester
New conductor Omer Meir Wellber matched the exuberant grace of Mozart with the spine-tingling drama of Wagner

Two days before this often remarkable concert, the BBC Philharmonic announced Omer Meir Wellber’s appointment as its new chief conductor from the start of the 2019 season. To date, Wellber is best known in the UK for his work with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and at Glyndebourne, where his interpretation of Puccini’s Madama Butterfly made a huge impression earlier this year. He has, however, also been conducting the BBC Philharmonic since March, both in the orchestra’s Salford studio and its concert series in Leeds, and has, it would seem, already forged a remarkably strong relationship with his players, who respond to him with tremendous enthusiasm and commitment.

He opened the evening with an elegant yet energetic performance of Mozart’s “Linz” Symphony (No 36 in C Major, K 425). The first movement blended nobility with warmth, while the finale was all exuberant grace and dexterity. The bittersweet Andante, however, with its sombre orchestration and ambiguous shifts from major to minor, formed the fulcrum around which Wellber’s interpretation swung. Poise and emotion were held in faultless balance here. It was exceptionally beautiful.

After the interval came a powerhouse performance of Act I of Wagner’s Die Walküre. Wellber established the high emotional pitch at the outset with a spine-tingling account of the storm, rarely relaxing the tension as the subsequent drama unfolded, yet all the while attentive to musical detail and psychological subtlety. There was real menace in the brass at Hunding’s arrival, and the love scenes were all fierce sensuality, their “furious ardour”, as Wagner puts it in his stage directions, wonderfully realised.

Brindley Sherratt made a truly ferocious Hunding, but as Siegmund and Sigelinde, Robert Dean Smith and Christiane Libor were perhaps less than ideally matched. Libor sang with unswerving intensity. Dean Smith, clean and clear, was altogether more detached, though his cries of “Wälse! Wälse!” seemed to go on effortlessly for ever.

Even so, this was thrilling stuff, marking the start of what promises to be a most exciting partnership between the BBC Philharmonic and its new conductor.

Contributor

Tim Ashley

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
BBC Philharmonic/Schuldt review – Simpson's Cello Concerto is compelling and totally original
The premiere of Mark Simpson’s concerto – with soloist Leonard Elschenbroich – confirmed him as one of the UK’s most exciting young talents

Andrew Clements

23, Apr, 2018 @11:40 AM

Article image
Prom 14: BBC Phil/Wellber review – creative approach makes for a magnificent Creation
Conducted from the keyboard, Omer Meir Wellber’s Haydn might have been idiosyncratic, but at its best this Proms performance was magical

Tim Ashley

30, Jul, 2019 @11:39 AM

Article image
Zehetmair/ BBC Philharmonic/ Storgårds review – through a glass, darkly
A rare outing for the glass harmonica brightened a concert of red-blooded Nordic clashes, while Thomas Zehetmair brought directness to the tricky Schumann Violin Concerto

Erica Jeal

02, Aug, 2016 @11:47 AM

Article image
BBC Philharmonic/Gourlay review – inventive, eclectic and ill-coordinated
Gourlay’s pulverising Montagues and Capulets upstages ambitious attempts to soundtrack Shakespeare via the Turing test and gay cruising

Alfred Hickling

25, Apr, 2016 @1:41 PM

Article image
St Petersburg Philharmonic/Sinaisky review – fresh and witty Prokofiev
Vassily Sinaisky stood in for Yuri Temirkanov in an exacting performance that left no detail overlooked

Andrew Clements

01, Feb, 2019 @4:25 PM

Article image
BBC Philharmonic / Morlot review – striking orchestral ideas in new Sierra symphony
Ludovic Morlot led a debut of Arlene Sierra’s Nature Symphony, which nods to everything from bees to the dark landscapes of Georgia O’Keeffe

Andrew Clements

26, Nov, 2017 @2:03 PM

Article image
LA Philharmonic/Dudamel/Wang review – crisp and vivid detail
Yuja Wang brought her virtuosity to Adams’s diabolical piano concerto, and a thunderous Rite of Spring showed the west coast orchestra at its best

Andrew Clements

19, Nov, 2019 @3:00 PM

Article image
BBC Philharmonic/Noseda at the Proms review – Missa Solemnis shakes with emotion
Choristers and soloists brought freshness and precision to the Beethoven mass in conductor Gianandrea Noseda’s keenly expressive interpretation

Erica Jeal

20, Jul, 2016 @11:42 AM

Article image
BBC Philharmonic/Sinaisky – review

Strauss's rarely performed and flawed 1904 symphony depicting a day in his own life was played formidably by the BBC Philharmonic, writes Tim Ashley

Tim Ashley

10, Feb, 2014 @4:03 PM

Article image
BBC Philharmonic/Mena – review

Closing an energetic evening, the 1941 ballet Estancia marked the start of the BBC Philharmonic's exploration of the works of Argentina's best-known composer, Alberto Ginastera, writes Tim Ashley

Tim Ashley

08, Dec, 2013 @3:42 PM