Puccini: Orchestral Music. Sinfonia of London conducted by John Wilson. Chandos. $21.99 (SACD).
It is an interesting curiosity of Puccini’s oeuvre that even his very modest production of non-operatic music ties consistently to his operas. Seemingly unable to let a good, strongly emotional tune appear solely in instrumental guise, Puccini again and again incorporated non-operatic material into his operas, creating new and stage-centered settings for works originally intended for the concert hall.
John Wilson and the Sinfonia of London showcase this characteristic clearly, albeit somewhat confusingly from an organizational perspective, on an excellent Chandos disc that focuses on early Puccini works that were not originally intended for incorporation into stage productions – except for those that were. Hence some of the confusion, which, however, matters less than the gorgeous melodic flow, brimming with emotional intensity, that characterizes nearly everything that Puccini created for any venue.
Most of the pieces here tie into Puccini’s first three operas – Le villi, Edgar, and Manon Lescaut – whether or not originally intended for those works. Preludio sinfonico, the first piece on the disc, is an exception, although it does have an operatic tie-in of its own, being largely modeled on the Act I Prelude to Lohengrin. Puccini tends to be thought of as diametrically opposed to Wagner in musical sensibilities, but in fact Wagner was one of his early influences. Preludio sinfonico has a decidedly hymnlike quality in several places, reflecting not only a Lohengrin esthetic but also Puccini’s own predilection for sentimentally lyrical material in quasi-religious guise.
Capriccio sinfonico, the second work heard here, was Puccini’s graduation piece at the Milan Conservatory and a source of material for not one but two operas: Edgar and Puccini’s fourth and most-famous stage work, La bohème. Wagner’s influence shows in Capriccio sinfonico to a limited extent, but the expressions of yearning and anguish already have over-the-top elements characteristic of Puccini’s later music and readily associated with his operatic worldview. The piece is followed on this CD by two short works written for and used within Le villi: the work’s Prelude, which is an exercise in serenity with faint echoes of Wagner’s Parsifal, and “Witches’ Sabbath” music called La tregenda that is an effective (and unusual-for-Puccini) tarantella and is certainly dramatic, if not exactly demonic.
Wilson and the Sinfonia of London next offer some curiosities completed by hands other than Puccini’s after apparently being abandoned: a Scherzo, a Trio, and an oddly named Adagetto (no, not Adagietto) whose tempo marking is actually Largo. What is mainly intriguing about these small works is how Puccini incorporated parts of them into his operas: a theme from the Scherzo into Le villi, the Adagetto into Edgar, and the melody of the Trio into, of all things, Madama Butterfly.
The somewhat scattershot organization of this SACD next leads it to two excerpts from Manon Lescaut rather than, more logically, Edgar. These are the Prelude to the four-act version of the opera – music dropped when Puccini created a three-act revision – and an Intermezzo heard between the second and third act and permeated by passion, yearning and the emotional extremism characteristic not only of this opera but also of most of Puccini’s work.
The Manon Lescaut material is followed on the disc by pieces originally written for string quartet and adapted by Wilson for string orchestra. The first of them is Crisantemi, an elegy for Amedeo, Duke of Aosta, written after his death in 1890 and, yes, subsequently incorporated into an opera: it appears in two different places in Manon Lescaut, aptly reflecting the melodramatic tragedy of the stage work. Next on the disc are Tre minuetti, well-balanced 19th-century ventures into 18th-century dance that are more emotive than was usual for minuets in their heyday. Music from all three appears in Manon Lescaut, which is set in the 18th century, and it is the theme of the second piece that actually opens the opera.
It is only at the conclusion of the disc that Wilson presents material taken directly from Edgar: the Preludio to the first act, which Puccini discarded when creating the opera’s final version, and the Preludio to the third act, which the composer retained and which effectively mixes sorrow, yearning and lyricism in a combination that was already characteristic of Puccini early in his career and was to become thoroughly identified with him over time. The sequencing of this recording makes it even more of a hodgepodge than does the music itself, but Wilson and the Sinfonia of London deliver such engaging and beautifully played performances of the works here – all in absolutely first-rate sound – that the confusing order of presentation and the oddities of Puccini’s use and reuse of instrumental material in various stage productions are less significant than the enjoyment of immersion in the composer’s consistent warmth and ever-present sentimentality.