Erica Jeal 

Dvořák: Symphony No 9 album review – Shani brings a natural freshness to a familiar work

The conductor, soon to finish an eight-year tenure at the helm of the Dutch orchestra, leaves the orchestra in good shape
  
  

Conductor Lahav Shani in the middle of a room of classical musicians from the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra
Holds the attention fast … Lahav Shani conducts the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra. Photograph: Guido Pijper

Lahav Shani’s eight-year tenure at the helm of the Rotterdam Philharmonic is coming to a close – he becomes chief conductor at the Munich Philharmonic in September – and he is leaving this fine orchestra in good shape. Their recording of Dvořák’s Symphony No 9 brings a natural freshness to this familiar work, offering no big surprises or grand gestures but holding the attention fast with an elegant restlessness.

The unfolding of the first movement is unhurried but unstoppable: Shani doesn’t overshape the phrases, but gives them the space and momentum to flow organically from one to the next. The big woodwind solos – the velvety flute in the first movement, the cor anglais in the second – make their mark without signposting.

Nothing is overly heavy, and there’s a skip to the middle section of the third movement that makes it sound almost humorous. But the finale still has all the weight it needs, its fluster and seriousness dissolving into a sweet clarinet solo and then blooming into something joyous and grand.

As an overture, there’s a Dutch rarity: Johan Wagenaar’s 1905 tone poem Cyrano de Bergerac. It couldn’t be more transparently inspired by Strauss’s Don Juan, but is easy to enjoy, and finds the Rotterdam players on swashbuckling form.

 

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