Shostakovich: Symphony No. 4.
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vasily Petrenko. Naxos.
$9.99.
Prokofiev: Symphony No. 4
(revised version); The Prodigal Son. São Paulo Symphony Orchestra conducted by Marin Alsop. Naxos. $9.99.
Sarasate: Music for Violin and
Orchestra, Volume 4—Introduction et Tarantelle; Jota de San Fermin; Fantaisie
sur le “Don Juan” de Mozart; Fantaisie sur “Der Freischütz” de Weber; Jota de
Pamplona; Airs écossais; Le Rêve;
L’Esprit follet. Tianwa Yang, violin; Orquesta Sinfónica de Navarra conducted by Ernest Martínez Izquierdo. Naxos. $9.99.
Respighi: Complete Orchestral
Works, Volume 4—Antiche danze e arie per liuto, Suites 1-3; Rossiniana;
Concerto in modo misolidio; Metamorphoseon modi XII. Désirée Scuccuglia, piano; Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma conducted by
Francesco La Vecchia. Brilliant Classics. $11.99 (2 CDs).
Hindemith: Complete Piano
Concertos—Concert Music for Piano, Brass and Two Harps; Theme with Four
Variations (The Four Temperaments) for Piano and Strings; Piano Music with
Orchestra (for Piano Left Hand); Chamber Music No. 2 for Piano, Quartet and
Brass; Concerto for Piano and Orchestra. Idil Biret, piano; Yale Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Toshiyuki Shimada. Naxos. $19.99 (2 CDs).
The remarkable Shostakovich cycle led by
Vasily Petrenko for Naxos continues with a sure-handed, thoughtful and
emotionally wrenching performance of one of the most difficult of the
composer’s symphonies to bring off successfully, his Fourth. A huge work,
lasting more than an hour, it is also a strange one, with two very long and
complex outer movements of nearly equal length framing a short, eerie central
one. The Fourth sprawls and can easily spiral out of control, but Petrenko
knows the score so well and holds onto it so firmly that it here attains
tremendous grandeur as well as considerable emotional punch. This symphony
follows Shostakovich’s two symphonic forays into “socialist realism” and
precedes his far more accessible Fifth, which he described as a Soviet artist’s
response to just criticism. But if the two prior symphonies and the one to
follow were all intended to ingratiate the composer, to some extent, with the
ruling authorities, the Fourth is in an entirely different vein. It is highly personal,
rhythmically and chromatically difficult, longer than its predecessors and
successor, and a stretch both formally (the first movement’s sonata form is
barely perceptible) and structurally (between the finale’s funeral march and
its bleak ending, the entire movement seems to grow organically). The Royal
Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra has become increasingly adept at giving
Petrenko just what he wants in Naxos’ excellent Shostakovich series, and even
if the orchestra’s massed strings remain somewhat less lush than would be ideal
for the music, the balance of orchestral sections is so good and the careful
attention to phrase and rhythm so impressive that the ensemble seems to have
internalized Shostakovich almost as thoroughly as has Petrenko himself. This
performance, and the series of which it is a part, are simply splendid.
Marin Alsop’s Prokofiev
Fourth is nowhere close to this level, although it is a respectable enough
performance and is cleverly paired with The
Prodigal Son, the ballet whose themes became the basis of the symphony.
Prokofiev wrote eight symphonies even though they bear the numbers 1-7, because
the Fourth exists in two versions that are so different as to be considered
entirely separate works. Alsop here offers the later, larger, longer and more
fully orchestrated one (it adds piano, harp and piccolo clarinet to the
instrumentation of the earlier Fourth). The São Paulo Symphony Orchestra is a well-balanced one, a fact that
serves this music well. The strings are particularly good, with bite and
intensity entirely appropriate for Prokofiev; in contrast, the brass section is
a trifle less adept, playing well but sounding somewhat strident from time to
time. This is actually clearer in The
Prodigal Son than in the symphony: the ballet is filled with vivid
contrasts in its retelling of the biblical morality tale of the son who engages
in excesses of all kinds before returning home filled with remorse. Alsop is
now principal conductor of the São
Paulo Symphony, and while she has clearly inherited a fine orchestra, her
Prokofiev CDs (this one follows an earlier release of Symphony No. 5 and The Year 1941) show that she has begun
making her own mark on the players. Alsop tends to do better with more-modern
music and less well with the traditional repertoire of the Romantic era and
earlier. This well-recorded Naxos CD shows how carefully she can explore works
that engage her and how well she can handle both their broad sweep and the
details of their individual sections. The orchestra’s sound is not particularly
idiomatic or sumptuous – less “Russian” than the sound of the Liverpudlians has
become under Petrenko – but it is quite fine, and Alsop’s measured and
well-balanced performances show her to be a considerable force in interpreting
Prokofiev’s music.
The fourth volume of the
Naxos series of Pablo Sarasate’s music for violin and orchestra offers lighter
stuff, but it contains two works of considerable interest as well as the
expected virtuosic requirements. These are Sarasate’s fantasies based on
Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Weber’s Der Freischütz, each an
effective display piece but also a work showing considerable understanding of
the themes of the operas – and in the case of the Weber fantasy, incorporating
a “flying staccato” technique that has to be heard to be believed. One of
Sarasate’s trademarks, this technique is brought off brilliantly by Tianwa
Yang, whose light touch and manual dexterity work particularly well in music
that was, after all, designed primarily as showpieces shining a spotlight on
their super-virtuosic composer/performer. The Mozart and Weber fantasies have
more substance than the others works on this CD, if not exactly depth, but
every work that Yang plays here has delights, notably including the highly
popular Introduction et Tarantelle
and the fascinating Le Rêve,
which is every bit as much an extended fantasy as are the works based on Mozart
and Weber. The Orquesta Sinfónica
de Navarra under Ernest Martínez
Izquierdo gives excellent support to Yang throughout the disc, allowing her the
front-and-center position that Sarasate intended while providing solidity and
just enough sense of gravitas to turn
these mostly light works into pieces with considerable heft, if not a great
deal of profundity.
Ottorino Respighi’s musical
explorations had greater seriousness of purpose, even when his music emerged on
the lighter side. The fourth volume of the top-notch Brilliant Classics series
of Respighi’s complete orchestral music offers one CD containing some of his
most-famous works and one featuring two pieces that are much less frequently
heard. The three suites of Ancient Dances
and Airs for Lute showcase Respighi’s fascination with the past and his
interest in bringing music of olden times into the 20th century
while retaining its essential character. The third suite (1931), for strings
alone, is the one that is most highly regarded and most often played, but the
first two suites are more sonically interesting and contain brighter and bouncier
dance tunes. The first (1917), as fine as it is, is somewhat overshadowed by
the second (1923), whose rousing Bergamasca
finale is a high point of the entire sequence of suites and is played with
suitable enthusiasm in this recording by Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma under
Francesco La Vecchia. The ensemble does a bang-up job with Rossiniana (1925) as well. Here Respighi looked back only a century
– nowhere near as far into the past as he did for the three lute suites – and
created a charming work based on a whole cascade of tunes by Rossini, shaping
the piece into four movements that are further subdivided through tempo changes
and some very clever orchestration. The final tarantella, interrupted midway by
a religious procession, is a study in amusement no matter how many times a
listener has heard it. But lightness is largely absent from the second CD here,
which finds Respighi incorporating the approaches of earlier times into far
more serious music. The Concerto in modo
misolidio dates to the same year as Rossiniana,
but this foray into a modern piano concerto employing the Mixolydian mode uses
Gregorian chant and forms typical of the Baroque to produce effects wholly
different from those in the Rossini-based work. The concerto, very ably handled
by pianist Désirée Scuccuglia, builds in virtuosity
until a very difficult final Passacaglia that also hints at forms ranging from
the toccata to jazz to Lisztian proclamations. The concerto is somewhat
over-ambitious and is not sufficiently virtuosic to draw strong attention to
itself or its soloist: it is more a coloristic work than an expansively
outgoing one. It nevertheless makes a very positive impression when performed
as well as it is here. So does Metamorphoseon
modi XII (1930), Respighi’s last original orchestral work (although the
third lute suite dates to a year later). This too is a work deeply immersed in
the past, consisting of 12 variations on an original theme that Respighi created
in modal style. The variations range from the fairly straightforward to the
unusual (based on pedal notes, a glockenspiel, muted strings and other
effects). The final three modi run
together and lead to a climax in which the whole orchestra is joined by an
organ – a sonorously impressive conclusion to some interestingly conceived and
structured music.
Four variations,
representing the four temperaments (melancholy, sanguine, phlegmatic and
choleric, as in Nielsen’s Symphony No. 2, but in a different order), make up
Paul Hindemith’s Theme with Four
Variations for Piano and Strings (1940), a work that has its own ties to
the past: Hindemith based it on a Brueghel painting from the 16th
century. Written as a ballet, the piece gets a rhythmically sure and very
well-played performance from pianist Idil Biret and the Yale Symphony Orchestra
under Toshiyuki Shimada on a fascinating two-CD Naxos release featuring all of
Hindemith’s piano concertos and sort-of concertos. In reality, Hindemith
labeled only one work as a piano concerto, a 1945 piece with a particularly
interesting finale that contains five distinct sections and, yet again, is tied
to the past, being based on a dance tune of the 14th or 15th
century. Again, Biret handles the work masterfully, and although the Yale
players are not at the level of professional musicians, they are quite fine and
for the most part give sturdy if not particularly compelling orchestral
support. The three other pieces here are all earlier, and each provides insight
into Hindemith’s musical thinking. Piano
Music with Orchestra (for Piano Left Hand), which dates to 1923, is one of
numerous pieces written for Paul Wittgenstein, who lost his right arm in World
War I. The most famous of these works is Ravel’s Concerto for the Left Hand. Hindemith’s contribution is obscure
because Wittgenstein did not care for it, locking it away but retaining the
rights to it – it was found only in 2001, among the papers left behind after
the death of Wittgenstein’s widow. There is little virtuoso display in the
piece, which treats the piano mostly as part of the overall ensemble – perhaps
a reason the work did not find favor with Wittgenstein. The piano takes a
larger role in Chamber Music No. 2 for
Piano, Quartet and Brass (1924), one of a series of seven chamber pieces
for various soloists and ensembles. The piece’s structure is rather oddly
balanced, with a 12-minute slow movement (more than half the work’s total
length) followed by a “Little Potpourri” that lasts for less than two minutes –
but it is a work of many contrasts and a very interestingly arranged
12-instrument ensemble. Concert Music for
Piano, Brass and Two Harps (1930) is sonically interesting as well,
employing four horns, three trumpets, two trombones and tuba as well as the two
harps and piano. The piano weaves in and out of the other instruments,
sometimes taking the lead and at other times being considerably less prominent,
and the music itself ranges in mood from the mysterious to the folklike
(Hindemith actually quotes a folk tune at one point). This Hindemith
compilation gives a multifaceted view of a composer whose popularity has never
been much more than modest – and it showcases the skill with which Biret, known
mainly for her Beethoven and her interpretations of Romantic works, can handle
pieces of the 20th century, giving each its unique character and
providing all of them with as much virtuosity as they require.
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