
MINNESOTA SCORES KNOCKOUT WITH SIBELIUS’ “KULLERVO”
Carnegie Hall, New York; March 1, 2010
Osmo Vänskä and the Minnesota Orchestra brought the house down last
evening. On paper the program did not look entirely promising. Of
course, Sibelius' early "Kullervo" Symphony really is a masterpiece,
its occasional immaturity as obvious as it is irrelevant, and it has
been receiving a welcome amount of attention on disc and in concert
lately (more on this shortly). Fans of the piece--yes, they exist--
will walk naked across the desert to see it live. But to preface this
70-80 minute behemoth with Beethoven's "Grosse Fuge" (in Michael
Steinberg's arrangement for string orchestra), all by itself on the
first half, is more than a tad strange. So let's be honest and say
that it didn't really work as a program, but there's no denying the
fact that Vänskä, a superb Beethoven conductor generally, has the
Minnesota strings in top form. They tore into this awkward piece like
a pack of happily unanimous demons. It certainly did whet the
appetite for more.
Anyone familiar with Vänskä's scorching recording of "Kullervo" for
the BIS label knew what to expect here: some daring extremes of tempo
(he takes the second movement's "grave" tempo marking seriously, with
unforgettable results), a huge dynamic range, and an intensity that
never lets up. Not only did he have the orchestra playing
magnificently, he also had a sensational lineup of vocalists, all
Finnish, from the YL Male Voice Choir, to soprano Päivi Nisula as the
sister who Kullervo unwittingly ravishes and drives to suicide, to
baritone Hannu Niemelä, whose defiant lament at the end of the third
movement was soul-shattering. Sibelius packed into “Kullervo” every
orchestral trick that he knew or had just learned as a young composer
studying in Vienna. Some of the parts are extremely challenging: the
repeated oboe notes in the first movement, for example, or the wild
brass licks in the fourth movement "Kullervo Goes to War." The string
writing is also extremely taxing as well as colorfully varied, from
the "vibrato" cellos as the start of the aforementioned movement, to
the "sul ponticello" ostinatos in "Kullervo and His Sister." Toss in
such tricks as flute and piccolo tremolos that go on for pages, and a
triangle part that looks fit to give the player carpal-tunnel
syndrome, and the result is a far more sophisticated and daring piece
of writing than is often acknowledged. Vänskä is quite simply the
master of every note. At the moment where Kullervo falls on his sword
in the final movement, a passage punctuated by a pause several bars
long in slow tempo, you would swear the entire audience stopped
breathing.
The concert was preceded by a noteworthy event in itself: a
discussion of "Kullervo" (and the Beethoven) by Glenda Dawn Goss,
professor at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki and editor of the
work's critical edition for Breitkopf and Härtel (available in a
relatively inexpensive pocket score, by the way). Professor Goss has
natural charisma as a speaker, and knows her subject as does no one
else on the planet. She is also the author of a splendid new Sibelius
biography, subtitled "A Composer's Life and the Awakening of
Finland" (University of Chicago Press), that is one of the most
interesting and readable works of its kind published in recent
memory. At the other end of the evening, Vänskä and his team offered
a smashing encore in the form of "Finlandia," in its rarely-heard
version for orchestra and male voice choir. After "Kullervo," to be
honest, the usual bit of fluff would have been insulting, and it's to
Vänskä's credit that he offered the audience a dessert worthy of the
main course.
David Hurwitz