Holst: Orchestral Works, Volume
3—First Choral Symphony; The Mystic Trumpeter. Susan Gritton, soprano; BBC
Symphony Chorus and Orchestra conducted by Sir Andrew Davis. Chandos. $19.99
(SACD).
Enescu: Symphony No. 2; Chamber
Symphony for 12 Instruments. Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by
Hannu Lintu. Ondine. $16.99.
Enescu: Symphony No. 3; Ouverture
de Concert sur des Thèmes dans le Caractère
Populaire Roumain. Tampere Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra conducted by
Hannu Lintu. Ondine. $16.99.
Brahms: Clarinet Quintet—Viola
version; Bridge: Lament for Two Violas; Robert Mann: Dreamtime for Solo Viola.
David Aaron Carpenter, viola; Members of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
(Bernhard Hartog and Rüdiger
Liebermann, violins; Walter Küssner,
viola; Stephan Koncz, cello). Ondine. $16.99.
Johann Strauss Sr. Edition,
Volume 24. Slovak Sinfonietta Žilina
conducted by Christian Pollack. Marco Polo. $16.99.
Ives: Three Places in New
England; Sibelius: Symphony No. 4; Wagner: Dawn and Siegfried’s Rhine Journey
from “Götterdammerung.” Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Michael Tilson Thomas. ICA Classics DVD. $24.99.
Weber: Der Freischütz—as
film opera “Hunter’s Bride” by Jens Neubert. Arthaus Musik DVD. $24.99.
Glenn Gould: The Russian Journey—a
film by Yosif Feyginberg. C Major DVD. $24.99.
Andris Nelsons: Genius on Fire—a
film by Astrid Bscher. Orfeo DVD. $39.99.
What provides the better
experience of a visit to unfamiliar musical territory – audio releases on CD or
SACD, or video releases on DVD? The expected answer is “it depends,” and of
course it does – on a variety of factors, including not only the repertoire but
also one’s own predilections for the auditory or visual medium. Nevertheless,
it becomes clear from a variety of recent releases in the two formats that the
media not only have their own strengths and weaknesses but also provide
inherently different experiences, beyond the obvious one of DVDs being
pictorial and CDs and SACDs offering sound alone.
The third volume of Chandos’
excellent Holst series and the second entry in Ondine’s Enescu cycle both offer
little-known works that feature vocal elements as well as orchestral ones.
Holst’s First Choral Symphony
(1923-24), for soprano, chorus and orchestra, contains some material
reminiscent of Mahler’s Third in its use of images of Pan and nature awakening,
and some that harks back to Handel’s L’Allegro,
Il Penseroso ed il Moderato in its contemplative and contrasting sections,
but everything is filtered through Holst’s unique sensibilities to produce a
work that is as much mysticism as pastoral celebration. And The Mystic Trumpeter (1904/1912), a
scena for soprano and orchestra, celebrates music itself while also striving
toward greater meaning – an approach typical of Holst, who even in his
best-known work, The Planets, moved
beyond fact and into mystic realms. As in the prior two releases of this
series, these BBC Symphony performances led by Sir Andrew Davis are exemplary
and highly involving even though the music itself takes some getting used to:
Holst had a very unusual way of handling the sonic environment of an orchestra,
and his works simply do not sound like those of other composers. Indeed, the
chance to immerse oneself in Holst’s sound world argues strongly that this SACD
presentation is in just the right medium and would gain little – even possibly
losing something – if visual elements were added.
The situation with Ondine’s
Enescu discs is similar. None of the works here, the Chamber Symphony, Second
or Third Symphony or Ouverture de Concert
sur des Thèmes dans le Caractère Populaire Roumain, is heard
often in concert halls or on recordings. But all should be – particularly the Third
Symphony. The Tampere Philharmonic plays Enescu’s music sensitively and with
considerable involvement under Hannu Lintu, and the Third Symphony’s pictorial (although never explicitly designated)
depiction of Earth, Hell and Heaven – the whole huge range of experience
amplified by use of piano, organ and wordless chorus in the finale – is
reminiscent of Holst’s constant stretching beyond the bounds of music itself. Enescu’s
handling of the orchestra is entirely different, however, and the Third Symphony
provides color, solemnity and grand scale throughout. Although not especially
long – 46 minutes in Lintu’s performance – it feels broader and more expansive
than its duration indicates, and is a deeply involving work that stands in
vivid contrast to the Ouverture that
opens the CD. The Second Symphony is also highly impressive: longer than its
successor but not programmatic and less tightly knit, it is thematically
interesting and formally very well crafted. And it stands in fascinating
contrast to the Chamber Symphony, written more than three decades later – in 1954,
the penultimate year of the composer’s life. Here Enescu shows great ability in
handling sparser instrumentation and a more-streamlined approach to symphonic
form, in a work whose scale is somewhat reminiscent of that of Prokofiev’s Classical Symphony even though the
effect of Enescu’s work is quite different. And again, immersion in all this
intriguing music is the key to appreciating it: visuals would be more likely to
distract from the experience than to add to it.
It is not the seriousness or
lightness of music that will make it better in an aural or visual medium. The
three viola-focused works that David Aaron Carpenter plays with tremendous
beauty and skill on another Ondine release are all quite serious and all quite
lovely, with the highlight definitely being the very rarely heard viola version
of Brahms’ late Clarinet Quintet. Although the composer’s Clarinet Sonatas, Op.
120, were specifically written for either that instrument or viola – and are
heard both ways with nearly equal frequency – the Clarinet Quintet is virtually
unknown when featuring a viola solo along with the viola within the string
quartet. Indeed, hearing how Carpenter’s viola both stands out against the
ensemble and blends within it is a major pleasure of this warm and winning
performance – and a form of enjoyment that is far more effective when heard
than it would be if seen, since visual elements would tend to draw the eye and thus
pull the brain away from the manifest beauties here. The shorter works on this
disc, by Frank Bridge (1879-1941) and Robert Mann (born 1920 – a founding
member of the Juilliard Quartet and its first violinist for half a century), both
show sure command of the instrument and a firm understanding of its ability to
evoke emotions that feel a good deal deeper than those of the violin despite
the fact that the viola is tuned a mere fifth lower. There would surely be some
visual enjoyment to watching Carpenter perform these pieces, especially Mann’s,
but it is doubtful that a pictorial approach would add a lot to the experience
here.
Nor would a DVD of the 24th
disc in Marco Polo’s wonderful Johann Strauss Sr. edition bring anything to the
music that Christian Pollack does not already offer with his marvelously
knowing, upbeat and enthusiastic performances with the Slovak Sinfonietta Žilina, which as usual plays these
works as if it has been doing so forever. This series is now nearing its end,
with this disc presenting music dating to as late as June 1849, a mere three
months before the composer’s death. As in previous releases, what comes through
here most clearly is the excellence of construction of Strauss Sr.’s music in
all the popular forms in which he composed. The CD includes only two waltzes,
both of them very fine: Landes-Farben
(Schwarz-Roth-Gold) and Des Wanderers
Lebewohl, a particularly extended work. There are three marches here: Brünner National-Garde-Marsch,
Triumph-Marsch and Manövir-Marsch.
And there are four delightful polkas: Piefke
und Pufke-Polka, Damen-Souvenir-Polka,
Alice-Polka, and Frederica-Polka.
The remaining two works are Huldigungs-Quadrille
and Louisen-Quadrille, the quadrille
form being one that Strauss favored throughout his career even though it is
somewhat repetitious and was waning in popularity by 1849. Pollack explores
both the ebullience of this music and its delicacy, and while it might be
interesting to see him gesturing to the orchestra and watching the musicians
respond, it is far from necessary – the CD stands on its own, without visuals,
very well indeed.
A good example of what
visuals add, or fail to add, to musical performances is the ICA Classics
release of Boston Symphony performances by Michael Tilson Thomas from the year
1970. These recordings date to less than a year after Thomas’ appointment as
assistant conductor in Boston, and the Sibelius and Wagner works are new to
Thomas’ discography as well as his videography. The DVD captures the look as
well as the sound of the Boston Symphony 40-plus years ago, and gives
listeners/viewers the chance to hear half an hour of interviews with the
conductor – some material recorded in 1970, the rest in 2013. Therefore, what
we have here is a chance to see Thomas’ podium manner as it was decades in the
past, hear his very fine interpretations of works by three very different
composers, listen to one of the top American orchestras at what may have been
the pinnacle of its sonic splendor, and learn through interview segments how
Thomas felt – and feels today – about musical matters. Given the fact that two
of the works here are otherwise unavailable in Thomas’ readings and the
interesting element of having Thomas interviews from 1970 and 2013 juxtaposed,
this DVD offers a strong argument for a visual presentation of the music. But
the argument is founded on ancillary elements, not on the music itself: these
interpretations, which are very fine indeed, would shine just as brightly on CD
as they do on DVD. So the success of the video release is really predicated on
matters beyond the music at its core.
Even more successful in
visual terms – for which it was designed from the beginning – is the Jens
Neubert film Hunter’s Bride, which is
an expansion and striking visual interpretation of Weber’s Der Freischütz. Featuring Juliane Banse as
Agathe, Michael Volle as Kaspar and Michael König as Max, the film uses stunning photography to complement
Weber’s highly effective, highly dramatic score. The Rundfunkchor Berlin under
Simon Halsey and London Symphony Orchestra under Daniel Harding provide the
high quality for which they are known, and the fact that this is a
two-hour-plus film opera from the
beginning rather than a filmed opera
in which cameras are trained on a stage makes the production entirely
appropriate for visualization and, indeed, unimaginable in any other form.
Opera itself, of course, is a visual medium – the original multimedia product,
combining music, song, acting, staging, dance, lighting and more. So operas
translate particularly well to DVD and can sometimes seem pale in CD form
unless the discs are based on concert rather than fully staged performances. In
the case of Hunter’s Bride, the
concept of a film has been there from the start, and Weber’s Der Freischütz is really a
jumping-off point for Neubert’s visual imagination, which fits the story
extremely well and provides a strong sense of Napoleonic times as well as the
timeless feeling of a fairy tale. This DVD is in many ways an ideal example of
what a visualization of classical music can be: not simply a good concert
performance with video added, but a work conceived from the start for a visual
medium and carried through in that medium to excellent effect.
More often, though,
classical-music-based DVDs are along the lines of Glenn Gould: The Russian Journey and Andris Nelsons: Genius on Fire, both of which are worthy endeavors
deserving of (+++) ratings, but neither of which is particularly compelling in
either musical or visual terms. The Gould DVD is yet another in a long series
of “bio-pics” about the famous (and notorious) Canadian pianist (1932-1982).
Here, Yosif Feyginberg has assembled material relating to Gould’s 1957 tour of
the Soviet Union: Gould was the first North American musician to perform behind
the Iron Curtain. The film draws on a variety of long-classified documents and
on the reminiscences of other musicians, including Vladimir Ashkenazy and
Mstislav Rostropovich, to tell the story of Gould’s performances in Moscow and
Leningrad (and a lecture-recital in the latter city). This makes for an
interesting historical document and a way to revisit a long-ago time in
geopolitics as well as music; and the film is well put together and moves
nicely during its short running time (56 minutes). It will, however, be of more
interest to scholars and historians than to musicians and music lovers. And the
Astrid Bscher film about conductor Andris Nelsons will appeal more to fans of
travelogues and of the young Latvian conductor (born 1978) than to music lovers
in general. It is quite early in Nelsons’ career for someone to make a
biographical film about him; indeed, he is not yet universally considered a
conductor of the first rank. Yes, he is doing a fine job with the City of
Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and is due soon to become the Boston Symphony’s
music director, but he has yet to garner the sort of international reputation
that would justify the movie title Genius
on Fire. Bscher, who followed Nelsons for two years, certainly does show
him moving around a lot and conducting in many places, but there is nothing in
the music-making here to justify the “genius” label or even to indicate why
this rising conducting star should be treated as if he already shines in the
highest firmament. The film is well made, but it smacks too much of hagiography
and hero worship to be of general interest. Like Glenn Gould: The Russian Journey and many other classical-music-based
DVDs, Andris Nelsons: Genius on Fire
is a specialty item for fans with specific interests and predispositions, not a
production that has enough inherent musical value to appeal to a large
cross-section of listeners or viewers.
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