Tchaikovsky: Piano Trio in A minor,
Op. 50. Swiss Piano Trio (Angela Golubeva, violin; Sébastien Singer, cello; Martin Lucas Staub, piano). Audite.
$19.99 (SACD).
Lehár: Der Graf von
Luxemburg. Eberhard Wächter,
Lilian Sukis, Erich Kunz, Peter Fröhlich,
Helga Papouschek, Jane Tilden, Kurt Sowinetz; Symphony Orchestra Kurt Graunke,
Munich, conducted by Walter Goldschmidt. Arthaus Musik DVD. $29.99.
Hérold: Symphonies Nos.
1 and 2; Overtures to “Zampa” and “Le pré aux Clercs.” Orchestra della
Svizzera Italiana conducted by Wolf-Dieter Hauschild. Dynamic. $12.99.
Delving a little more
deeply than usual into the works of composers who are known only for a relative
handful of music often pays unexpected dividends: there turn out to be some
real gems among pieces heard less often but created with the same level of
skill as the better-known ones. This is
certainly the case with Tchaikovsky’s lengthy Piano Trio, Op. 50, his only composition in a form that he stated
directly that he did not like. It was
the death of the brilliant pianist Nikolai Rubinstein that led Tchaikovsky to
create this piece in his memory, and it is likely as a memorial to Rubinstein
that the work has a more-prominent part for the piano than is given to either
stringed instrument. The form of the
trio is quite unusual: it is in two movements, the first a very extended Pezzo elegiaco and the second an even
longer set of variations, in which Tchaikovsky displays his considerable skill
in such forms as the waltz, mazurka, barcarolle, Russian folk dance and even a
fugue. The length of the piece (50
minutes) and its unusual structure make it difficult for a typical set of three
players to hold it together, but the Swiss Piano Trio does so very well indeed:
each player is not only comfortably virtuosic but also quite willing to step
back when the others’ parts need to be brought to the fore. The performers play equally well in ensemble
and as individuals, and seem thoroughly at home with a work that became the
first of a series of “memorial piano trios” by Russian composers: Rachmaninoff,
Arensky and Shostakovich all wrote them.
Although unlikely ever to become as popular as Tchaikovsky’s symphonies
and ballets, the trio is a work of considerable emotional depth and a great
deal of musical interest – it deserves to be heard more often.
So does Franz Lehár’s 1909 operetta, Der Graf von Luxemburg, which is the
only one of his pre-World-War-I works whose melodiousness and story can stand comparison
to those of The Merry Widow
(1905). Most listeners consider Lehár a “one-hit wonder,” and certainly The Merry Widow is one of the greatest
of all operettas, both musically and in its timeless (or at least easily updated)
story of love found, lost and found again.
But Der Graf von Luxemburg,
when performed as Lehár
intended, is at the same level, and its superb “slow waltz,” in which the
principals sing of looking for and possibly missing out on the “beautiful,
golden dream” of love, is an even stronger expression of yearning than the
famed Merry Widow Waltz. Nor is this the only superb tune in this
waltz-imbued work: a separate waltz for the operetta’s “second couple” is
equally affecting in its deliberately lighter vein. The new Arthaus Musik DVD of Der Graf von Luxemburg presents a
televised performance from 1972 that is one of the best offerings of the work
in recent years, assuming it is fair to count a 40-year-old version as
“recent.” What makes this presentation
so good is its use of genuinely operatic voices: Eberhard Wächter as the Count, Lilian Sukis as
Angèle Didier, Erich Kunz as Count
Basil, Peter Fröhlich as Armand Brissard, and Helga Papouschek as Juliette
Vermont are all in top form both vocally and in their acting. The excellent libretto by Alfred Maria
Willner and Robert Bodansky, whose basic theme involves two dissolute young
people unexpectedly finding love with each other, has been edited and modified
in some ways that work well by connecting the action effectively – and some
ways that do not work at all, for example by eliminating any aria by Countess
Stasa Kokozow (Jane Tilden). Indeed,
quite a few numbers are dropped, shortened, assigned to singers other than
those for whom they were written, or heard only in snippets or as background,
and that is very unfortunate, since Lehár’s music here is splendid throughout. The modifications of the words sung to the
music (the adaptation is by Huge Wiener) are serviceable, but the loss of a
fair amount of the music itself is much to be regretted. The story is twisted a bit to make Angèle less of a royal-title-seeking demimondaine and Basil less of a
buffoon; in fact, this version ends up with a triply happy marital ending,
which is not quite what Lehár
and his librettists intended. Nevertheless,
as a TV adaptation – which starts with an exuberant carnival scene and features
some delightful touches, such as Brissard using some of his newly acquired
funds to install an electric light in his Bohème-like
studio – this is quite a fine performance both musically and dramatically. A full, uncut version of Der Graf von Luxemburg would be preferable, and would actually give
The Merry Widow a run for its money
musically if not dramatically. But for
those unfamiliar with Der Graf von
Luxemburg, this DVD will come as something of a revelation.
It would be exaggerating
to consider Ferdinand Hérold
(1791-1833) a truly well-known composer – he appears more often in
light-classical concerts for his overtures to Zampa and, less frequently, Le
pré aux Clercs, than anywhere else. But although to some extent he is known for
his operas and their well-constructed, vivacious curtain-raisers, he is known
not at all for his two symphonies, so having a chance to hear them is a real
treat. This is not to say that these
are, by any stretch of the imagination or auditory apparatus, great works: Hérold wrote them in 1813 and 1814 and
was clearly influenced more by Haydn and by opera composers such as Paisiello
and Rossini than by Beethoven or Mozart.
Nevertheless, the symphonies are well constructed and have a number of
interesting elements, especially in the rondos with which both conclude. No. 1, in four movements, has a fairly solemn
opening movement that displays some contrapuntal skill, and No. 2, in three
movements, begins with an attractive Largo
introduction. In both symphonies,
though, the slow movement – not too slow, being marked Andante both times – is far from weighty and makes no attempt to
delve into deep emotion or even very far into lyricism. So the works’ finales, instead of being determinedly
lightweight, end up containing more-interesting elements and having a greater
feeling of personal involvement than the earlier movements – an unusual
circumstance. The Orchestra della
Svizzera Italiana under Wolf-Dieter Hauschild gives the symphonies spirited
performances in a recording made in 1998, but the ensemble does even better
with Hérold’s two popular opera
overtures, whose sparkling wit and succession of memorable tunes communicate
effectively with listeners in a way that the somewhat stodgy symphonies do not.
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