Mieczyslaw Weinberg: Cello Concerto; Fantasy for Cello and Orchestra; Korngold: Cello Concerto. Kristina Reiko Cooper, cello; Kaunas City Symphony Orchestra conducted by Constantine Orbelian. Delos. $18.75.
The European diaspora in the years before and during World War II took composers in a wide variety of directions, musically as well as in the geographical sense in which it displaced so many others. The juxtaposition on a new Delos CD of cello-and-orchestra works by Mieczyslaw Weinberg (1919-1996) and Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897-1957) shows this in some intriguing ways.
Most of the recording is devoted to the music of Weinberg, whose compositions are undergoing something of a rediscovery and renaissance. In fact, on one level it is disappointing that this recording includes only two of his three cello-and-orchestra pieces, omitting the Cello Concertino that was discovered posthumously and would have fit on the CD along with everything already on it. The reason for the disappointment is that Weinberg’s obvious skill in writing for cello, his sensitivity to the instrument’s acoustic and emotional range, will likely leave the audience wishing for more. Nevertheless, what listeners do receive from Kristina Reiko Cooper and the Kaunas City Symphony Orchestra under Constantine Orbelian is very worthwhile music indeed, certainly justifying the recent (if still modest) upsurge in Weinberg’s popularity.
Weinberg’s Cello Concerto dates to 1948, by which time he was resettled in Stalin’s Soviet Union and engaging in the juggling act required of composers at the time: expressing himself while trying not to draw too much attention from the arbiters of socialist realism in music. The melodic beauty of the concerto is everywhere apparent, and the work has an elaborate intensity that places it within the Romantic era emotionally while providing more than a few hints of the compositional modernity that Soviet composers were supposed to hold firmly in check. It is a four-movement piece that in a sense is in two two-movement sections: the very expressive opening Adagio ties musically and emotionally to the not-much-quicker Moderato that follows; then there is a significant change of mood for an Allegro that concludes with a very extended and elaborate cadenza and moves straight into an Allegro finale. This concluding movement is in many ways akin to the music of Shostakovich, with whom Weinberg shared a close friendship: Shostakovich considered Weinberg, 13 years his junior, to be one of the best Soviet composers, and helped shield him, his works and his family from the depredations of Stalinism. The dissonances, angularity and rhythmic insistence of the finale of Weinberg’s concerto all bring Shostakovich to mind, as does the work’s distinctly Shostakovich-like quiet ending. Yet Weinberg’s own style is apparent throughout, and Cooper and Orbelian do a first-rate job of bringing forth Weinberg’s unique compositional elements while not neglecting to highlight his echoes of Shostakovich and, occasionally, of other composers as well.
Weinberg’s Fantasia for Cello and Orchestra (started in 1951, completed in 1953) is a three-movement work that shares a number of elements with the Cello Concerto – including its opening-movement Adagio and its eventual quiet ending – but that is distinctive in its handling of thematic and rhythmic material. The soulful first movement contrasts strongly with a second one that has much of the feeling of a scherzo and in that respect is, yes, Shostakovich-like in some of its rhythms and harmonic wanderings. The cello’s guitar-like strumming at one point is striking. The very short finale is unusual in the tempo that Weinberg chooses – Andantino leggiero – and is delicate and thoughtful throughout, questioning rather than decisive at the end. Cooper’s sensitivity to the flow and feeling of this movement is especially notable.
Cooper and Orbelian bring equal thoughtfulness to the very different Cello Concerto by Korngold, a single-movement work (the composer planned to add two more movements but never did) that is packed with intensity and not a little bombast. Unlike Weinberg, Korngold left Europe behind and forged a successful career in the United States – specifically in the film industry, to which he contributed scores of considerable power. His Cello Concerto rests particularly strongly in moviemaking: it was created as a centerpiece of a 1946 Bette Davis melodrama called Deception that was built around a musical love triangle involving a pianist, a cellist and a composer. The film itself was not a success, perhaps because its formulaic plot and dialogue melded less than smoothly with the elegance of the classical-music world, exemplified by Korngold’s score, against which the action played out. But the Cello Concerto itself is impressive and actually works well in the single-movement form into which Korngold shaped it in revising what he created for the movie. Surprisingly, much of the earlier portion of the concerto is more modern in sound than the Weinberg works on this CD, with the dissonances more prominent and more strongly emphasized. Korngold effectively merges Romantic melodies with modern rhythms, opening with considerable drama through chords alternating between C major and C minor, then presenting highly contrasting thematic material – sweeping and passionate on the one hand, lyrical and yearning on the other. The last portion of the concerto is light and comparatively bouncy, and the cello part is extremely difficult – a fact that seems not to trouble Cooper in the least. She and Orbelian take the full measure of this work, following its contours with care and hinting at the sense of abandon underlying elements of the film from which the concerto derives – but without ever overstating or descending into anything crass. This CD as a whole is a top-notch exploration of 20th-century music that in some ways rises above its era and the experiences from which these composers created it – while in other ways being strongly representative of the circumstances that led Weinberg and Korngold, and many others, to seek creative fulfillment in places distant from their own homelands.