Berliner Philharmoniker / Simon Rattle / Krystian Zimerman LEONARD BERNSTEIN Symphony No, 2 "The Age of Anxiety"
W. H. Auden was a charming moralist, wistful yet pitiless, affectionate yet weighed down by emotional pain. With The Age of Anxiety,
he created a historical and psychological diagnosis of the soul and of
the time in the guise of a Baroque pastoral poem: “Lies and lethargy
police the world / in its periods of peace. What pain taught / is soon
forgotten; we celebrate / what ought to happen as if it were done, / Are
blinded by our boasts. Then back they come, / The fears that we fear.”
The outer frame of the action is provided by the four protagonists who
fall into conversation in a New York bar and – as the alcohol breaks
down the barriers of internal censorship – discuss the war, their own
world view and their faith: a fictional conversation between average
people, the chorus of a drama (that fails to materialise) and a hymn and
elegy.
The poem, which won Auden the Pulitzer
Prize, inspired Leonard Bernstein to compose his eponymous symphony:
“The essential line of Auden’s poem,” said the composer, “is the record
of our difficult and problematic search for faith. In the end, two of
the characters enunciate the recognition of this faith – at the same
time revealing an inability to relate to it personally in their daily
lives.” In the score, which mixes a kaleidoscopic variety of different musical styles, the concertante solo piano takes on a symbolic function:
“The pianist,” as Bernstein wrote, “provides an almost autobiographical
protagonist, set against an orchestral mirror in which he sees himself,
analytically, in the modern ambience.” In the Berlin Philharmonie, no
less than Krystian Zimerman will take on the solo part, interspersed
with jazz-style syncopation, to which Bernstein subsequently added an
extensive cadenza before the final coda.
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