Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week

Sarah Connolly/Robert Dean Smith/RSO Berlin/Vladimir Jurowski
(Pentatone)
The conductor’s fine recording with the Berlin Radio Symphony has accuracy, perception and crystalline detail

Most of Vladimir Jurowski’s previous Mahler recordings have been made with the London Philharmonic, taken from their concerts together at the Royal Festival Hall in London and released on the orchestra’s own label. But this fine version of Das Lied von der Erde comes from a performance that he conducted in Berlin in October 2018, with his other orchestra, the Berlin Radio Symphony. The accompanying booklet includes an essay on the great song symphony by Jurowski himself, which is full of insights. The concluding Abschied, he writes, marks a return to “an individual identity by a ‘lyric’ artist who owes so much to the tradition of Schubert, a deliberate resignation from the ‘heroic’ path of Beethoven, in whose footsteps Mahler seemed to follow for such a long time”.

Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde album artwork
Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde album artwork Photograph: PR Handout

There’s certainly nothing heroic or elegiac about this performance, no heart-on-sleeve in mezzo Sarah Connolly’s account of that great finale, in which Jurowski shapes the instrumental commentary with meticulous accuracy, while the intrusions of the everyday world in the joyous outbursts of the earlier movements take on a deliberately abrasive quality. Tenor Robert Dean Smith sounds under pressure in the opening Trinklied vom Jammer der Erde – but then what tenor (other than Fritz Wunderlich on Otto Klemperer’s classic recording) does not? Smith is impressively sure-footed, though, in his two other songs.

Nothing heart-on-sleeve about this performance ... Sarah Connolly.
Nothing heart-on-sleeve about this performance ... Sarah Connolly. Photograph: Christopher Pledger

Some may prefer a more subjective approach in what is probably Mahler’s greatest and certainly his most personal achievement, instead of Jurowski’s determined objectivity, and perhaps there’s a balance to be found between these extremes. But there’s no doubting the logic of this performance, in which the Berlin orchestra makes every detail crystal clear.

This week’s other pick

Mark Elder and the Hallé are working their way steadily through Debussy’s orchestral music on their own record label, and their latest release brings together the longest of the French composer’s concert scores, the Images for Orchestra, with his most famous work, the Prélude à l’Après-midi d’un Faune. Elder is always persuasive – there’s nothing unnecessarily showy or sentimental about his shaping of the Images, while the Hallé’s playing is beautifully refined – every colour and texture in Prélude à l’Après-midi is perfectly placed. They include a couple of interesting miniatures, too – Debussy’s own orchestration of the languorous piano piece La Plus que Lente, with its prominent use of the cimbalom, and Colin Matthews’ transcription of one of the piano Images, La Lune Descend sur la Temple qui Fut, the latest iridescent Debussy orchestration Matthews has made for the Hallé.

Contributor

Andrew Clements

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
Heard in a less usual male-voice pairing and with a piano reduction of the full orchestral score, there are more gains than losses to be found here

Andrew Clements

18, May, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
Mahler & Ye: The Song of the Earth review – song-symphony returns to its golden age
Xiaogang Ye sets the Tang-era Chinese poems that ultimately inspired Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde to colourful new music

Andrew Clements

29, Jul, 2021 @5:30 PM

Article image
Mahler: Titan review – period instrument insights into a beautiful mind
Before Mahler’s First Symphony reached its final form, it was a ‘tone poem’, well revived here on German and Viennese instruments

Andrew Clements

09, May, 2019 @2:00 PM

Article image
Mahler/Riehn: Das Lied von der Erde review – brightness and immediacy
Petr Alrichter’s recording of Riehn’s chamber version of Mahler’s almost impossibly taxing song-symphony is well worth the listen

Andrew Clements

22, Mar, 2018 @3:30 PM

Article image
Gustav Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde – review
Alice Coote's exquisite colouration in the great song-symphony makes this disc worthwhile, but Klemperer's 1964 account is still the benchmark, writes Andrew Clements

Andrew Clements

23, May, 2013 @10:47 AM

Article image
Mahler/Cooke: Symphony No 10 review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
Part of his cycle of works by Mahler, Vänskä’s stoic approach pays dividends in the composer’s unfinished work, with unswerving instrumental detail

Andrew Clements

25, Mar, 2021 @3:00 PM

Article image
Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde CD review – Jonas Kaufmann delivers a real disappointment

Andrew Clements

29, Mar, 2017 @3:43 PM

Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde – review
Mahler's orchestral song cycle is delivered efficiently enough, but Jane Henschel's contribution is a disappointment, writes Andrew Clements

Andrew Clements

03, Nov, 2011 @10:49 PM

Article image
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra/Fischer review – rich and urgent Mahler
The orchestra who premiered the work in 1912 gave Mahler’s Ninth Symphony a fierce and articulate performance under Ádám Fischer

Tim Ashley

21, Feb, 2019 @11:59 AM

Article image
LPO/Jurowski review – exemplary Mahler ends in a blaze of optimism
Sarah Wegener proved that she is a very a fine Straussian in a group of songs that ended this concert that also featured Wagner’s Tristan prelude and Mahler’s fifth symphony

Tim Ashley

14, Nov, 2019 @12:47 PM