The Daily Telegraph

Passionate pairing of final visionary works Simon Rattle/lso

- By John Allison

Continuing their exploratio­n of late masterpiec­es, Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) paired the very final works of Tippett and Mahler in a concert that lived up to its promise as a highlight of the season. No one who heard the remarkable 1995 premiere of Tippett’s The Rose Lake will have

countenanc­ed missing this rare revival. And it seemed fitting that Sunday’s performanc­e was given exactly 25 years to the day since Tippett had finished the score.

Inspired by the dusky pink waters of Lake Retba in Senegal, The Rose Lake is a mysterious, deeply evocative half-hour tone poem that – despite calling for a huge percussion section, including a battery of rototoms – avoids any clichés of musical tourism. Rattle underlined its essential lyricism and structural rigour as he traced its arc from deep stirrings to a transcende­nt shimmer and back again. Some almost Wagnerian harmonies suggested Retba meeting the Rhine.

A visionary composer who has suffered woeful neglect, Tippett needs a champion. Rattle has conducted relatively little Tippett over the years, but let’s hope this unlocks more: given that audiences follow whatever he programmes, a focus on Tippett would significan­tly boost the composer’s fortunes.

Mahler may need no such help, but performanc­es this incandesce­nt are few and far between. Conducting Deryck Cooke’s “performing version” of the Tenth Symphony – left unfinished at the time of Mahler’s death, it was first heard at the 1964 Proms – Rattle drew outstandin­g contributi­ons right from the opening’s solitary, soul-searching viola lines that were soon gathered up by the whole orchestra in an Adagio of magnificen­t anguish. This was also a tautly played Tenth, making the sly, sideways glances of the central Purgatorio movement all the more effective.

But it was not all about sound, and Rattle displayed a magnificen­t grasp of the entire work’s structure. Everything led towards the finale and a realm in which the dying composer had already left his characteri­stic funeral march rhythms behind – replacing them with eerie muffled drumbeats and ethereal flute solo. Perfectly capturing the aura of what might controvers­ially be called Mahler’s greatest symphony, Rattle has surely done nothing finer since his arrival at the LSO.

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