BBC Music Magazine

A pair of electrifyi­ng LSO live recordings

David Nice is spellbound by the power and beauty of Vaughan Williams symphonies thrillingl­y captured at London’s Barbican

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Symphony No. 4 in F minor; Symphony No. 6 in E minor

London Symphony Orchestra/ Antonio Pappano

LSO Live LSO0867 68:06 mins

As Antonio Pappano points out in an eloquent booklet introducti­on, his interpreta­tions of Vaughan Williams’s two most combative symphonies coincided with historic evenings: the Fourth of 1934 on a tense, angry election night, the post-world War Two Sixth fading to nothing before the lights were switched off in concert halls around the country at 5.30pm the next afternoon. Privileged to be there on both occasions – the entire concerts were unforgetta­ble

– I wondered how the performanc­es would hold up in a recording. There was no need to have worried: they’re both electrifyi­ng, and they sound absolutely magnificen­t.

Too much so in the case of the Fourth? The dissonance­s can take a bonier, spikier approach. But note how often Vaughan Williams writes ‘cantabile’, ‘espressivo’ and ‘appassiona­to’; in the score, often for themes where you wouldn’t expect such qualities. Pappano makes sure the work sings as often as it can; only the first violins in the slow movement are pointedly deadened. This is a terrible beauty, energetic, Satanic, utterly spellbindi­ng, keeping enough in reserve to make the biggest climaxes truly shattering. And there’s a very special quality to the muted, divided strings as they head to the 14-part chord that ends the first movement. Special, too, are the wind solos – an unearthly oboe (performed by Juliana Koch) and a calm flute (performed by Gareth Davies) on the cusp of silence.

Vaughan Williams

The opening bars of this Sixth, a cry of anguish that’s also passionate bel canto song, promise the very best recording of the work. You might need a break between the two symphonies, but undeniably the apocalypti­c vision continues; the relatively serene Fifth comes between, of course, and makes for a magnificen­t trilogy in concert – maybe Pappano can try that out when he takes over from Simon Rattle as the LSO’S principal conductor in 2023, excellent news which has just recently been announced by the orchestra (see p12).

Pappano makes it clear that the great air on a G string which calmly emerges towards the end of the first movement doesn’t come out of nowhere; its melodic contours are well delineated in the hurlyburly earlier. The tension of threatened destructio­n in the tattoos of the ensuing Moderato is palpable; we felt the terror in the hall and it leaps out on this recording too.

Focused mania in the nasty scherzo is perfectly gauged – properly non-human work from tenor saxophonis­t Bradley Grant here – and there’s still beauty to be found in the lunar landscape of the Epilogue, never rising above pianissimo, sometimes offering the ghost of a song.

You could have heard a pin drop in the sparsely populated Barbican; the oddly alive background quiet of the recording does not lie. Vaughan Williams must have known Shostakovi­ch’s Eighth Symphony and its bleak, unyielding Passacagli­a when he composed this; but he provides a masterpiec­e of equal stature in a different symphonic progress. Rostropovi­ch’s live performanc­e of the Shostakovi­ch with the LSO is one of the great recordings; now Pappano’s Vaughan Williams joins it.

There really are stunning times ahead for the London Symphony Orchestra and Antonio Pappano, no doubt about it.

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

The opening bars of this Sixth promise the very best recording of the symphony

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 ??  ?? A night to remember: Antonio Pappano and the LSO at the Barbican
A night to remember: Antonio Pappano and the LSO at the Barbican

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