Hi everyone, I've been reading this board for a long time, and I want to add my first contribution
At the Concertgebouw's website, the orchestra is being marketed as follows: the velvet strings, the unique sound of the woodwinds and the golden brass. Well, this may have been a hallmark of the past, but in 2019 I rarely hear it. It's still a great orchestra, but it's sounding more and more like any other orchestra... The woodwinds are still impressive. The strings have a certain sheen and sweetness (but again, this is hardly unique), and the brass may still sound 'golden'... if you can hear them!
Now I don't want to sound pedantic (because it still IS a great orchestra), but I really feel the RCO has lost some of it's characteristic 'bite'. There was a time when every department made its presence felt. A 'symphony' orchestra in every sense of the word. But things went backwards, starting - unsurprisingly perhaps - with the arrival of Jansons.
Now, I don't want to conceal the fact that I don't care for Jansons. Jansons is like taking a train trip through the Dutch countryside. The train departs perfectly on time, there are no accidents along the way, and arrives on time at your destination. But fresh and green as the Dutch countryside may be, it makes for a very monotonous trip. In that way he resembles Haitink (at least, in his later years).
The major difference between Haitink and Jansons, is that, basically, Haitink has no startling ideas about how the music should go. Jansons, on the other hand, is known for having 'ideas' that do the music more harm than good. We all remember the RCO M5, in which Jansons slows down way too soon in the closing pages of the Rondo. He's not alone in this, but that's hardly an excuse. A bore Haitink may be, he is NEVER perverse (although, his Vaughan Williams cycle does come close).
Chailly's is the last distinctive period of RCO's legacy. Gatti's tenure was too short to assess. Chailly's programming was intriguing and adventurous, which wasn't always accepted. He also had a radically different approach to Mahler: more analytical, maybe not the Mahler we 'know', but it certainly was different. Chailly also had the advantage of the RCO at its peak; every department responded with equal commitment. Gatti had the major task of restoring the 'bite' of the RCO. And even if I don not warm to all Gatti's performances (his idiosyncratic Berlioz SF was a major trial), I do feel he had the kind of personality that Jansons lacked.
For me, the most significant RCO period was Van Beinum's. He managed to present an orchestra in full bloom, without having to resort to cheap, calculated, arbitrary effects which made Mengelberg's tenure so (in)famous. Mengelberg surely made the RCO famous all over the world. His orchestra had a very distinct sound. David Hurwitz once classified Mengelberg's music making as being 'unhygienic' (or something to that effect, please correct me if I'm wrong), and I must concur. There must be room for freedom of interpretation, but Mengelberg crosses the line. There's no excuse for adding exasperating rubato where the composer does not ask for it. Mengelberg's distortions damage the overall structure of the music. It's the kind of music making that may be intriguing (sort of) at a concert performance, but it quickly tires on the ears on repeated listening. It's flashy and self indulgent. Mengelberg may be in charge of the show, but it's the composer that should be at the center of things!
At least Van Beinum showed that you can get good results without those antics, remaining true to the composer's intentions, and at the same time sound idiomatic, unique and exciting. Van Beinum also championed Dutch music more than Mengelberg. Indeed, Van Beinum's repertoire was broader than his predecessor. Mengelberg, with exceptions, basically kept on performing the tired old ha-rang of the standard repertoire.
Unlike Beinum, Mengelberg didn't take much notice of Bruckner, probably because Bruckner's music is not a good vehicle to impose his ridiculous mannerisms on! Of course, there's Mahler. Mengelberg introduced his music to The Netherlands. For that he deserves thorough credit! But I cannot not believe that the 1939 account of the Fourth is the same interpretation as in the early 1900's. Mengelberg was a very vain and stubborn conductor who valued his views on music above everything else, even Mahler's. Actually, the 1939 Fourth is quite 'normal' in the last three movements. But the first movement is heavily and willfully distorted, up to the point of parody. Now, Mahler wasn't afraid to poke fun at himself, but the first movement of the Fourth was not intended as a joke.
But, back to the 'sound' of the Concertgebouw. Berlin has often been criticized (aptly, I might add!) for being an overrated band with an impressive past. Now, I won't call the RCO overrated. But there are similarities. Like Berlin, the RCO is losing its unique brand of sound. The strings dominate, especially in Berlin, the woodwinds save the day in Amsterdam, and in both cities the brass are mostly buried beneath a large amount of string playing. I don't like it.
The Concertgebouw brass doesn't make its presence felt. For some strange reason, they've vanished into the overall blur. Now don't get me wrong, I'm not longing for the kind of aggressive approach favored by the likes of Solti, turning the orchestra in a brass band with additional contributions by strings and woodwinds. But hey, there isn't a crime for making your presence felt.
It's odd: when we DO hear the RCO brass, the tone is full and noble. But in tuttis or densely orchestrated pieces, they simply do not 'cut through' the texture. Horns are mellow, but have no 'edge'. Trumpets mostly can be heard, but there's a big difference between being heard and making your presence felt. And the trombones? They are the most disappointing aspect. There is no swagger (remember MTT's Ives 2 finale from Amsterdam? Yuck!).
It has often been said that the lack of bite has something to do with the hall. I don't agree. There have been hundreds of recordings made there, ranging from Mengelberg to Gatti and many guest conductors, and in most cases the brass make their presence felt. The deteriorating is clearly emanating from, approximately, the period after Chailly. I don't think this is a interpretative choice either as I can not imagine any conductor not wanting every section of the orchestra to shine through. In a quite recent Bruckner 5th with Harnoncourt, there is no bite from the brass, not even at the famous and gorgeous coda of the finale where the brass writing is nothing short of exhilarating. There is no excuse for that! Why has it to be this reserved? Is it more musical, more civilized or tasteful? Come on!
I could go on and on. I still like the RCO. It still is a great orchestra. But I find the lack of bite frustrating. And we do not know what the future will bring. Even if you hire an exciting new chief conductor, he has to deal with the mellow sound, mellow sound can be attractive but should not be an overall hallmark of an orchestra claiming to be versatile. Mellow may work in Brahms (sort of), but it does scant justice to Mahler, Shostakovich, Stravinsky and all the usual suspects.
Maybe I'm being too harsh. Maybe it's simply the way orchestras sound these days. But I refuse to accept that notion. Look at Pittsburgh: a magnificent, powerful brass section! Look at Vienna: still great horns, decent trumpets (trombones were never a great asset in Vienna). Look at New York, Chicago... You get my point.
The RCO has become a mainstream orchestra in every sense of the word, it's orchestral values diminishing and adhering to some kind of generalized sound heard in practically every major orchestra. It even releases its own recordings, many of them highly superfluous and inferior to the RCO's previous outings. Or just put more bluntly: they are a snooze fest. The often lauded 2005 Haitink Bruckner 8 'SACD' was a disgrace, again with a brass section unable to cut through a thick blanket of strings, never mind the tedious tempi.
I can only hope the RCO will regain its bite. There aren't that many orchestras in the world with such a pedigree. But you can't live on your reputation alone. 'Tradition is slovenliness' as Mahler aptly stated. People want to hear the RCO not only for its distinctive sound, but also for its music making and interpretation. They want to hear an orchestra play the pants off the music! They want to leave a concert mesmerized, not thinking 'it was good, even nice, but I can't spot any goosebumps on my arm'. And with RCO asking big prices, they have an obligation to oblige.
Just my two cents