Schumann: Symphonies Nos. 1 and
2. Seattle Symphony conducted by Gerard Schwarz. Naxos. $9.99.
Schumann: Symphonies Nos. 3 and
4. Seattle Symphony conducted by Gerard Schwarz. Naxos. $9.99.
Schumann: Piano Concerto; Manfred
Overture; Overture, Scherzo and Finale. Bella Davidovich, piano; Seattle
Symphony conducted by Gerard Schwarz. Naxos. $9.99.
Some conductors are
particularly distinguished for their commitment to less-often-heard music, such
as 20th- and 21st-century works, but seem somewhat out of
their element in more-traditional repertoire.
Marin Alsop is one who comes immediately to mind; a great deal of the
time, Gerard Schwarz is another. The
three Naxos re-releases of Schumann performances that originally appeared on
the Delos label show Schwarz managing his Seattle Symphony well but not
bringing any particular interpretative fire or originality to the works
themselves.
In Schumann’s Symphony
No. 1 (“Spring”), recorded in 1988, the first movement features some attractive
instrumental details but imprecise handling of tempo: Schwarz speeds things up
from time to time for no good reason.
The second movement, taken rather slowly, showcases strong strings. In the third, Schwarz has the players lean
into the music with a strong legato
line that makes this into a more-serious and rather downbeat scherzo rather
than a bright one. And the tempo of the
finale, like that of the first movement, is slippery. In Symphony No. 2, a 1989 performance, the
first movement is nicely paced and builds well, but the tempo bobbles a bit in
the scherzo, and the lovely third movement comes across as pleasant but
scarcely profound. The finale is simply
ordinary, well played but undistinguished.
The final chord, which sounds rather half-hearted and is certainly not
emphatic, seems to represent the interpretation as a whole.
Symphony No. 3
(“Rhenish”) was recorded in 1990. The
first movement starts very well indeed, but it seems to run out of steam about
one-quarter of the way in, almost going into stasis. And the brass performance is odd: the horns
are excellent, but the trumpets are dull-sounding by comparison. The horns are good again in the second
movement, but the music plods, slowing again and again, repeatedly losing rhythmic
vitality. The third and fourth movements
have pleasant ebb and flow but are nothing special, and the finale has a
pronounced legato feel even in places
where it should have greater bounce.
There is also a strange, four-minute timing error here: the finale is
four minutes shorter than the CD indicates, and the total CD time is also
overstated by the same four minutes – an odd error. Schwarz’s best performance in the symphonies
is of No. 4, recorded in 1992. The first
movement builds particularly well, although the strong chords are rather mild
and muted, and the second and third movements, while scarcely revelatory and
tending to drift at times, move ahead nicely.
The finale has a particularly bright start, and the horns, here as
elsewhere, are a big plus. As a whole,
this is a middle-of-the-road Schumann symphony cycle that takes no big chances
and offers no major revelations. It is
perfectly adequate but scarcely inspired or inspiring.
The 1990 recording of
the Piano Concerto with Bella Davidovich is a broad one – rather too broad –
with a fine pianist whose brightness seems sometimes at odds with Schwarz’s
more desultory approach. The first
movement starts too slowly, but soon speeds up; as a whole, it meanders, never
catching interpretative fire. The second
movement is effectively gentle, with lovely work by the winds. The third movement also flows gently, but
here that approach is less appropriate: there is little dramatic or exciting
here, and the overall effect is of a work that meanders rather than
building. The Manfred Overture, recorded in 1991, although well played, is also
lacking in intensity – it tends to flag from a dramatic standpoint. The Overture,
Scherzo and Finale, from 1989, opens with an earnest movement whose coda is
particularly good, but then lapses into a moderately paced middle movement that
sounds flabby. The finale starts well
but, as in several other instances on these CDs, Schwarz soon slows down, then
picks up the pace again, leading to an overall feeling of disconnectedness. As a whole, these three Schumann discs are
unexceptional and unexceptionable: their flaws are minor and frequent rather
than major and occasional, but their overall effect is of prosaic run-throughs
of the music rather than strong, committed and caring performances.
No comments:
Post a Comment