Elgar: Cello Concerto; Sospiri;
Salut d’amour; La capricieuse; Dvořák: Waldesruh’; Rondo for cello and
orchestra; Respighi: Adagio con variazoni. Sol Gabetta, cello; Danish
National Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mario Venzago. RCA. $14.98.
Mahler: Symphony No. 8.
Jennifer Check, Rebecca Nash and Jennifer Welch-Babidge, sopranos; Ann McMahon
Quintero and Robynne Redman, mezzo-sopranos; Gregory Carroll, tenor; Lester
Lynch, baritone; Jason Grant, bass-baritone; Christopher Newport University
Chamber Choir, Old Dominion University Concert Choir, Richmond Symphony Chorus,
Virginia Children’s Chorus, and Virginia Symphony Chorus and Orchestra conducted
by JoAnn Falletta. Hampton Roads Classics. $17.
There is dynamism in
live performances that more than makes up for sonic imperfections (based on
where one sits in a concert hall), disturbances (other audience members moving
or coughing), and inconvenience (frequently high ticket cost, plus the cost of
getting to and from the performance, sometimes in inclement weather and/or in
severe traffic or aboard crowded mass transit).
And the dynamism is captured in the best recordings of these
performances, which have the added advantage that the CDs can be assembled from
works performed over several days – or pieced together from several renditions
of the same work. At their best, live
recordings (a contradiction in terms, like “dark brightness”) can be as good as
Sol Gabetta’s of the Elgar Cello Concerto from 2009 (November 9-12, to be
specific). Gabetta is an absolutely
marvelous cellist, seeming to be so joined to her instrument that there is
little sense she is playing it at all – the cello seems to be making the music,
which flows to the audience through Gabetta’s fingers and body. The fact that she plays a Guadagnini cello
from 1759 is certainly a part of the gorgeousness of her music-making, but
there is more to it than that: her bowing, her phrasing, her musical
understanding, her involvement in what she plays are quite extraordinary, and
the realization that she made this recording at the age of 28 is truly
astonishing – although it is worth remembering that Jacqueline du Pré, with whom the Elgar concerto has
been strongly identified for nearly 50 years, made her classic recording when
she was only 20. Gabetta’s reading of
the concerto is extremely lyrical and intimate, although with plenty of power
where it is called for. There is an almost loving conjunction between the cello
lines and the orchestral part – Mario Venzago does an outstanding job leading
the Danish National Symphony Orchestra in a supple, unobtrusive and highly
supportive accompaniment. Gabetta’s flowing warmth and intensity give this work
an emotive lyricism even beyond what other fine performers have found in it,
yet her attacks have plenty of bite when necessary and she produces a big,
warm, glowing sound almost continuously and apparently effortlessly. It is an
altogether winning performance on every level. But there is a disappointing
side to this very fine RCA disc: nearly everything else on it is of much
lighter weight, like a long series of encores.
The three additional Elgar works here are essentially salon music,
although Gabetta plays them very beautifully. The two by Dvořák are slightly more substantial,
with the melancholy elements of the Rondo
for cello and orchestra particularly well handled; but, again, these are
scarcely “big” works. Only the Respighi, a very interesting set of variations
with some highly skillful orchestration, has enough heft to complement the
Elgar concerto effectively. The original 2010 issue of this performance was a
two-CD set that also included Latvian composer Pēteris Vasks’ 1978 Grāmata čellam for solo cello; the
present single-disc release stays more firmly in the Romantic and post-Romantic
sound world, but at the expense of providing any additional depth approximating
that of Gabetta’s lovely Elgar concerto.
There is depth aplenty
in Mahler’s Eighth Symphony as performed by the Virginia Symphony Orchestra under
JoAnn Falletta in a recording made on May 27, 2012, at the Virginia Arts
Festival. This is in many respects quite an amazing performance, in which Falletta
finds the recurrent thematic lines from the symphony’s first part whenever they
reappear in the second, producing greater unity than many other conductors do
in this work; and in which the Virginia Children’s Chorus stands out as an
exceptionally fine group amid the many other professional and amateur choruses
enlisted for this huge symphony. The
very opening of performances of Mahler’s Eighth tends to set the tone for all
that comes later: Veni, creator spiritus
can be sung either plaintively, asking the creator spirit to descend and
inspire all that comes later, or demandingly, insisting that this creative force appear. Falletta, interestingly,
takes a middle ground: the chorus is clearly asking rather than demanding, but
it is a request that is expected to be honored.
This leads into a Part I whose sections follow each other clearly and
with even flow, with solo instruments’ lines peeking out from the overall
texture intermittently to fine effect. The orchestral introduction to Part II
is less portentous than in some other performances, less fraught with the
Mahler angst that appears only in this section of this particular work. Falletta’s
approach is far from lightweight, but it does not suggest high drama, much less
tragedy. The vocal sections of Part II continue in the same involved but not
overdone vein: the singing is generally excellent (although bass-baritone Jason
Grant is a bit strained in his lowest register), the choral parts are particularly
well handled, and the three sopranos’ distinctive voices lend their characters
some differentiation. It would have been nice if the CD’s booklet said which
singer filled what role, but in fact the booklet is the weakest part of Hampton
Roads Classics’ offering: 4½ of the 10 inside pages simply list all the
orchestral and choral performers, with another 2½ pages devoted to solo
singers’ biographies. There is nothing about Mahler, nothing about the
symphony, and the sung words are neither given nor offered via a Web site.
Since this is by far Mahler’s most text-heavy numbered symphony and one whose
words are absolutely crucial to the composer’s communication, this omission is
a very poor decision indeed, and the booklet as a whole gives the production an
amateurish feel that is less than the performance deserves. Falletta is scarcely a Mahler specialist, but
she shows in this recording that she can scale the heights to which this
composer invites performers and audiences alike, and can take listeners along
with her – both in the concert hall and at home.
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