I have a slightly different take, perhaps because the 5th isn't my favorite among Mahler symphonies to begin with. I think there's plenty of wildness built into the piece and, therefore, doesn't need to be underlined so much. Mahler made a big study of Bach's "Well Tempered Klavier" before embarking upon the 5th. That being the case, I like a tad more control, precision and contrapuntal clarity in the 5th than, say, M6 or M7. I'm willing to sacrifice a bit of wildness to get that precision and contrapuntal clarity. But don't get me wrong; I'm not going out on a long limb for the new Vaenska M5: I would give it four stars out of five. But just to cite one example . . .
Yes, it's obvious that Vaenska is a bit too controlled and hemmed in at the start of the second movement. But it's certainly together, right? More to the point, he doesn't slow down in the slightest when the busy opening stuff transitions into the first theme group (exactly 35 seconds into movement II) - which happens in sooooooo many recordings of M5! Mahler doesn't indicate that there should be ANY slowing down at all. More to the point (again), what's the use of starting uber-fast if you're going to have to slow down in less than a half-minute into the movement? I'll take the slower start if the conductor can keep the tempo up throughout (until we reach the first Trio section - or whatever you care to call it).
Also, I know this is superficial and isn't an important matter, but I love the sound of tuba player Steven Cambpell, playing on the new B&S "MRP" rotary valve CC tuba. It gets a dark sound like a BBb tuba, but with the immediate response and focus of a C tuba.
https://www.interstatemusic.com/912029-Buffet-Group--B-And-S-Instruments--MRP-CS-Perantoni-CC-Tuba--Silver-Plated-MRPCS.aspx
Later on: I listened again to the middle movement on Youtube. It might be all wrong (I don't think so), but I like it. I like how he approaches the two big solo horn passages: slow the first time (bringing out Mahler's strange, 'fin de siecle' harmonies there) and quite fast the second time. The ending is both exciting and clean - to me, anyway.
I don't see the point of your observations, for more than one reason. First, you can be wild and precise-nay, you can be wild and, at the same time, you must keep being precise. That's the point in much of Mahler's music. For example, even in a Symphony without heavy brass like the Fourth, you still find that near the end of the third movement Mahler marks the climax triple fortissimo, horns and trumpets fortissimo, bells up, with the option of reinforcement by the clarinets in case the trumpets aren’t strong enough, with the timpanist (who plays the Bell-Motif) instructed to use double sticks on each drum. If a conductor goes soft with it, he is clearly wrong.
But let's be back to the Fifth: the conductors in the recordings I mentioned are not wild at the expense of precision. They are precise (and three of them are live recordings!) and make their orchestras play in the true spirit of the music. And they do not slow down nonsensically as you seem to imply:
Barshai:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmzmJ4U8FRE&list=PLYWhSIF4jgxj71a9aiVU1afDRm88BQXbsBernstein:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JwxrTsSQf0Yhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xbc-KLY3tTUKarajan:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cyGKsfGXoI(I did not find the Gielen and the Rosbaud on youtube, but they do something similar to the ones mentioned above. Moreover, Gielen has an approach to the Rondo similar to Vänskä, but much more effective, because his clarity and the initial relaxed, almost pastoral mood build up impressively until at last the search for the Chorale proves to be successful, while Vänskä remains rather cold).
Anyway, more than one source used for the critical edition of the Fifth indicates a Luftpause between the primary theme/introduction and the primary theme proper, this means that Mahler thought of them as two separate parts of a whole and a change of tempo to distinguish the two could be done, as we know that conductors like Mahler underlined the structural subdivisions by tempo fluctuations (I am listening to the early recordings of Boehm and even he, during the 1930s, was inclined to structural changes of tempo, with excellent results and without renouncing precision as Furtwaengler a bit often did). The point is that it should be done in a way that makes it work. And when it works, it is perfectly ok. Critical editions (when they are correct) can be very useful when approached in order to make informed choices, but they becomes dangerous when they are used in a pilatesquqe way: "I do not need to think about it, I have just to do as it is written" (an so we end up with no more contrabass-solo in the III movement of the First and the Andante preceding the Scherzo in the Sixth...).
Moreover, if it is senseless to slow down after 35 seconds of an Allegro, is it senseless to slow down after 29 of an Allegro moderato?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-ujTjBSqskAnd the slow down here is written.
Something similar happens at the beginning of the First Symphony's Finale, with a "stürmisch bewegt" introduction and an "energish" primary theme (it should not escape this similarity, because this Finale of the First has something in common with the Fifth, even thematically speaking: cf the recitative of the cellos at the beginning of the development space of the II movement of the Fifth with the the second theme on the long dominant of F, before the so called Durchbruch of the Finale of the First).
You reminded me of a professor of which I read he had criticized Borodin because he started a symphony with a fermata (
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmUsL6biVro) by saying something like: "It takes an incompetent composer to start a symphony with a fermata!"-- And of course one thinks immediately: ta-ta-ta-taaa (
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKcAAA1O2sc)!
Anything is possible, if handled convincingly. And yet the literalism of certain passages of Vänskä would not be a problem
per se. The real problem is that Vänskä seems to sedate the music, he seems to be indifferent to it. Of course the notes are right there and correct (it is the minimum required of a studio recording), but what that music should express is not. Take for example another failure of Vänskä's interpretation: the beginning of the secondary theme of the II movement. What happens at this point? The primary theme, in A minor, stormy, tragic, has just collapsed, it has literally disintegrated in an explosion, and the atmosphere should be tense because after that we expect some relief from a secondary theme in major mode; instead, not only we get a secondary theme in F minor, but it is a theme from the Trauermarsch! Take Bernstein or one of the other conductors I mentioned and you can touch the tension of the expectation and the subsequent sense of tragedy of not finding relief (and, on top of that, you seem being mocked by the woodwinds' interjections). After that horrid series of radiographs in slow motion that is the primary theme of Vänskä, there is no expectation, no tension, he just goes through it with an awful indifference. And it's all the same for all the symphony: I keep hoping he will awake to the calls of the music and he keeps letting me down with his being seemingly indifferent, and when something changes (in the Scherzo), it changes for the worst.
The Fifth is an aggressive, modernist symphony and if somebody has problems with that, he/she should stay away, because going against what the music expresses just ruin it. Klemperer did not like it and then stayed away from it. That's how a honest artist should behave.
Of course five-stars reviews are just being written praising the "balance" and the absence of "bombast". Yeah, because exalting the extremes is vulgar, Mahler music should always be played as pleasant as possible; even when he is concerned with a rabble, like in the Third, you have to be gentle and the desperation and the manic joy of the Fifth should be contained within the limits of decorum.
I thought that the beauty of Mahler's music is principally in its honesty: it can express everything, from the sublime to the ugly, because everything it expresses is part of our life, our real life, not a life as it should be or as we wish it were, and excluding some part of it is wrong, it is a lie. But I seem wrong because there is more and more people that want this music normalized: "Let's not underline the ugly, it is not decent!"
Of course on the internet every opinion seems to be valid and it does not matter if it is based on erroneous facts or ignorance as long as 100 users find the review useful.
Of course Vänskä is the top conductor of BIS and BIS is one of the very few companies that have not yet a complete Mahler cycle in their catalogue, and this means that the cycle will go on triumphantly amid hailing crowds of enthusiastic fans. Thus all that I have written is useless. Forget about it and enjoy Vänskä conducting a fantastic Mahler's Fifth, in which
balance and symmetry are restored [indeed that incompetent of Bernstein had ruined it by distorting its real meaning].
2 movements – central movement – 2 movements [: the hard facts of the Fifth. You can't argue with this brilliant observation about the structure of the symphony].
Each one individually characterized to perfection, played to perfection and recorded to perfection.Make no mistake this is Mahler. Mahler for grown-ups perhaps [ineeded Bernstein's, Karajan & co. was Mahler for stupid children like me].
Mahler for me now in 2017 and not so much for me at 17 back on 1984. A different Mahler but a marvellous Mahler there's no doubt.
Certainly one of the finest Mahler recording I have ever listened to.(Steve Kindleson, 3 people found this helpful)
Or, to be more succinct and get faster to the point:
If you think Vanska in Minn. conducting M5 should be good,you would be right! Plenty of nuance and detail to be found here, emphasized by deep, burnished sound [indeed I had flames bursting from my ears, while listening to it! It's not like Bernstein that makes me fall asleep].
Enjoy!(P Ski, 4 people found this helpful)
Yeah, enjoy.