Glazunov: Symphonies Nos. 1-9;
The Seasons; La Mer; Introduction and Dance from “Salome”; Raymonda—Suite;
Violin Concerto; Piano Concertos Nos. 1 and 2; Concerto for Alto Saxophone and
String Orchestra; Concerto Ballata for Cello and Orchestra; Chant du ménestrel
for Cello and Orchestra; Réverie for Horn and Orchestra; Méditation for Violin
and Orchestra. Rachel Barton Pine, violin; Alexander Romanovsky, piano;
Marc Chisson, alto saxophone; Wen-Sinn Yang, cello; Alexey Serov, French horn; Royal
Scottish National Orchestra and Russian National Orchestra conducted by José
Serebrier. Warner. $44.99 (8 CDs).
Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; The
Year 1941. São Paulo
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Marin Alsop. Naxos. $9.99.
Holst: Symphony in F, “The
Cotswolds”; Walt Whitman Overture; A Winter Idyll; Japanese Suite;
Indra—Symphonic Poem. Ulster Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta. Naxos.
$9.99.
Placing Alexander
Glazunov (1865-1936) in the classical pantheon is by no means easy. Initially considered to be Tchaikovsky’s
successor, Glazunov showed remarkable precocity: his first symphony was
performed when he was only 16. He was
quite prolific for a time, then essentially stopped composing about two-thirds
of the way through his life, devoting himself to his position as Director of
the St. Petersburg Conservatoire – and clinging to Romantic-era ideals so
firmly that he was already deemed hopelessly old-fashioned and out of touch
long before his death. But Glazunov has
fallen into greater obscurity than Sibelius and Ives, who also stopped
composing many years before their deaths, or Saint-Saëns, who was also considered hyper-conservative and unworthy of
attention in his later years. And
Glazunov’s music is by no means unworthy: it is well-crafted, carefully
orchestrated and often quite beautiful. It
somehow lacks a certain “oomph,” even when performed as well and with as much
intensity and understanding as it receives from José Serebrier. Yet, even
though it shows little real harmonic or communicative progress from 1881 to
1906 (the years of Symphonies Nos. 1-8 –No. 9, a single movement orchestrated
after Glazunov’s death, dates to 1910), it has many individual movements that
are striking and effective. Warner’s
eight-CD Glazunov set is a bare-bones re-release of individual CDs devoted to
the symphonies (with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra) and concertos (with
the Russian National Orchestra). The set
is well-priced and well-recorded; the performances range from very good to outstanding;
and although the set contains no information on the music, the booklet notes
about the original releases are available online. So there is ample opportunity here for
listeners unfamiliar with Glazunov – or ones who know him only through his Violin
Concerto, probably his most frequently performed work – to form their own
opinions of his worth as a creator.
Glazunov was certainly
not forward-looking, nor did emotion run very deeply through his symphonies –
only the first movement of No. 6 even approaches the involvement generated by
Tchaikovsky. Glazunov’s works are
controlled, formally well-structured, even elegant, reaching into many corners
of the 19th century without ever moving beyond late-Romantic
style. Interestingly, the dedications of
some of the symphonies show Glazunov’s interests and knowledge: No. 1 is
dedicated to Rimsky-Korsakov, No. 2 to Liszt (in memoriam), No. 3 to
Tchaikovsky, No. 4 to Anton Rubinstein.
The first two symphonies are not only solid but also filled with the
techniques that Glazunov would employ in all his later symphonic works: he was
not a composer who matured in any meaningful sense – but then, he started out
with maturity well beyond his years.
Several symphonies are uneasy mixtures of expressive and straightforward
elements: No. 3 has a very emotional Andante
mixed with three movements that seem to come from a different world, while No.
6 has intense opening and closing movements bracketing two much slighter middle
ones. No. 4 is particularly interesting:
it has three movements, none of them slow, although there are slow sections in
the first and third and a tightly knit structure that delivers more emotion
than do some of Glazunov’s actual slow movements. No. 7 picked up the name “Pastoral” because
its opening is reminiscent of Beethoven’s Sixth, but in fact it has more of the
urban feel of an Elgar work than a sense of the countryside. Listeners will certainly find many things to
admire and enjoy in the symphonies, even if it will likely remain difficult to
pick a single one as standing head and shoulders above the others.
Serebrier’s Royal
Scottish performances also include ballet music from Raymonda (1898, deliberately written in successor-to-Tchaikovsky
style) and The Seasons (1900,
featuring no humans – only abstractions of seasonal elements); La Mer, an 1889 Wagner-influenced tone
poem predating Debussy’s by 16 years; and two pieces for Oscar Wilde’s play Salome, written in 1900 (five years
before Richard Strauss’ notorious opera).
As in the symphonies, the structure of these works is quite solid, even
stolid, but they tend to sound as if they are just going through the motions
where emotional communication is concerned.
The final two CDs of
this set include Glazunov’s concertos, plus a few short soloist-and-orchestra
pieces. The concertos, featuring fine
soloists and exemplary playing by the Russian National Orchestra, are all
interesting in their own ways. Actually,
“their own way,” singular, is closer
to the truth, because every concerto except Piano Concerto No. 1 follows the
same basic model: Liszt’s. That is, they
are single-movement, thematically interconnected works that nevertheless sound
as if they contain multiple movements because of their tempo changes and
overall structure. Glazunov, however,
was no Liszt, and the pieces sometimes feel and sound like second or third
drafts rather than finished products.
Nevertheless, all have significant points of interest, such as the
two-movement structure of the first piano concerto (the second movement being
an extended theme-and-variations in which each variation has a very distinct
character). The concerto for alto
saxophone – Glazunov’s last work – is especially interesting, just because
there is so little concerto repertoire for this instrument. And the short pieces interspersed among the
concertos are fine miniatures, warm and well-orchestrated and sometimes more
affecting (as in the case of the Réverie
for horn and orchestra) than some of the longer works. All the soloists offer high levels of skill
and virtuosity, and Serebrier has clearly studied this music and plumbed what
modest depths it has, just as he has paid close attention to the symphonies and
ballets. Listeners who enjoy
late-Romantic works and would like to experience some well-made but rarely
heard ones will find this eight-CD a pleasure in many ways. But not all: the online notes are often
self-contradictory and irritating, for example saying at one point that
Glazunov was 16 at the debut of his Symphony No. 1 and at another stating
incorrectly that he was 17, and sometimes spelling the name of his patron,
Mitrofan Belyayev, as Belaieff (either is an adequate transliteration from the
Cyrillic, but some consistency would be nice).
Also, the arrangement of the music on the CDs is simply bizarre:
Symphony No. 3 with No. 9, Nos. 1 and 2 together but in reverse order, No. 4
paired with No. 7, and no apparent rhyme or reason at all for the sequence of
the concertos. There are many pleasures
to be found in Glazunov’s music, but there was no reason to make it this
irritating to find them.
Prokofiev was one of
the post-Glazunov Russian composers who did bring symphonic music to new and
more creative regions, and the first disc of a planned Prokofiev cycle
conducted by Marin Alsop is quite a good one.
Prokofiev’s World War II symphonies, Nos. 5 and 6, are his best, and
Alsop displays a sure hand and considerable attentiveness to inner voices and
instrumental balance in her work with the São Paulo Symphony Orchestra, of which she recently became
principal conductor. This is a strong, nicely
balanced orchestra, all its sections playing well, its strings particularly
adept with Prokofiev’s often-biting rhythms, its brass perhaps a touch strident
in sound but precise in attack. Alsop’s
interpretation of the symphony is generally first-rate and even incisive, the
only significant flaw being a much-too-slow approach to the trio of the second
movement – this section is supposed to pull the music back from its headlong
rush, but not bring it to a virtual standstill.
Still, this is a fine start to Alsop’s Prokofiev cycle – and the other
work here, The Year 1941, makes for
an intriguing contrast with the symphony.
Written after the German invasion of the Soviet Union, the work has
patriotic fervor and aims for an
uplifting conclusion (its final section is called “For the Brotherhood of
Man”), but comes across as clangorous and clattery rather than solemn or
celebratory. Here the orchestra’s brass
sound fits the music’s theme quite well, and if the work is scarcely major
Prokofiev, it is interesting for showing another side of a composer generally
thought of as a symphonist.
Gustav Holst, in
contrast, is not thought of as
writing symphonies. Indeed, except for The Planets, he is not a particularly
well-known composer, and those who do know his music tend to think mostly of
its Indian and folk-music influences – although in fact Holst wrote a
considerable amount of vocal music, including eight operas. Holst did write one symphony, “The
Cotswolds,” in 1899-1900, and it gets a solid and attractive performance from
the Ulster Orchestra under its principal conductor, JoAnn Falletta. The first, second and fourth movements of the
symphony are fairly straightforward and display the influence of Wagner as well
as some hints of folk music, but the second movement – written in memory of
utopian socialist William Morris – is considerably more heartfelt and comes across
quite effectively. Wagner’s influence
also shows in Holst’s Walt Whitman
Overture (1899), which – like “The Cotswolds” – was influenced by Holst’s
sociopolitical interests. A Winter Idyll is an even earlier work,
dating to 1897, when Holst was 23. The
orchestral writing here is mature, but the piece is rather bland. The other two offerings on this CD are later:
Indra, a tone poem based on an Indian
legend about a demon and the god of the heavens, was written in 1903, and the Japanese Suite, written for a Japanese
dancer and choreographer, dates to 1915.
Both works show Holst’s mature style more clearly, incorporating as they
do the harmonies and rhythms of the musical traditions of other nations within
a Western orchestral framework that is handled with delicacy and grace. Falletta, a strong advocate of less-known
music, gets fine sound from the orchestra in all these works and makes a good
case for all of them, and indeed for Holst’s music in general.
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