Vaughan Williams: Symphonies Nos.
5 and 7 (Sinfonia antartica). Sheila Armstrong, soprano; London
Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra conducted by Bernard Haitink. LPO. $17.99 (2
CDs).
Elgar: The Dream of Gerontius; Symphony
No. 1. Peter Auty, tenor; Michelle Breedt, mezzo-soprano; John Hancock,
baritone; Collegium Vocale Gent and Royal Flemish Philharmonic conducted by Edo
de Waart. PentaTone. $29.99 (2 SACDs).
John Knowles Paine: Symphony No.
1; Overture to Shakespeare’s “As You Like It”; Shakespeare’s
“Tempest”—Symphonic Poem. Ulster Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta.
Naxos. $9.99.
Schumann: Symphony No. 3
(“Rhenish”); Brahms: Symphony No. 2. Orchestra Sinfonica di Torino della
RAI (Schumann) and Philharmonia Orchestra (Brahms) conducted by Carlo Maria
Giulini. IDIS. $18.99.
Schumann: Sonatas Nos. 1-3 for
Violin and Piano. Christian Tetzlaff, violin; Lars Vogt, piano. Ondine.
$16.99.
Schubert: Piano Sonatas Nos. 13,
D. 664, and 18, D. 894. Janina Fialkowska, piano. ATMA Classique. $16.99.
Corelli: Chamber Sonatas, Opp. 2
and 4. The Avison Ensemble conducted by Pavlo Beznosiuk. Linn Records.
$34.99 (2 SACDs).
As the heart of holiday
gift-giving season fast approaches, classical-music lovers –or people shopping
for classical-music lovers – may be wondering what sorts of recordings to
consider that are just far enough off the beaten path so they would make worthy
additions to existing collections…even ones that already contain pretty much
everything in the standard repertoire. One approach is to look for unusually
interesting recordings of standard or near-standard works, such as Vaughan
William’s Fifth and Seventh Symphonies. The Fifth requires an orchestra able to
play for nearly 45 minutes at levels that only rarely rise to forte, and a conductor able to shape the
very quiet, frequently hymn-like music in a way that retains forward flow and
audience interest. The Seventh, on the other hand, needs a conductor able to
accept the work’s film-music-like sound and the use of the orchestra for
tone-painting and to support the story of Robert Falcon Scott’s doomed
Antarctic expedition. Bernard Haitink proves more than equal to both
symphonies’ requirements in a new LPO release of performances he conducted
years ago: the Fifth in 1994 and the Seventh in 1984. The grand sound and
sensitive playing of the London Philharmonic, and Haitink’s sure hand for
pacing and emphasis, make this two-CD set a fine gift for lovers of Vaughan
Williams’ symphonic music.
An important work of another
major British composer, The Dream of
Gerontius, gets a very fine performance in particularly excellent sound on
a two-SACD set from PentaTone. Elgar’s sort-of-oratorio (the composer objected
to use of the term) is highly impressive in choral passages and very effective
orchestrally as well, and Edo de Waart marshals vocal and instrumental forces to
fine effect. The strongly Catholic flavor of the theme – the faithful Gerontius
dies and, after several scenes of a journey through a noticeably Catholic
afterlife, is gently placed in Purgatory – may not appeal to all listeners and
was in fact a barrier for a time to the work’s performance in some quarters.
But the music is so well-crafted that this piece is very much worth having even
for listeners who do not accept its highly traditional religious message. And
it is coupled with a fine rendition of Elgar’s First Symphony, one of the few
well-known symphonies in the key of A-flat and a piece that nicely complements The Dream of Gerontius because of the
symphony’s mood of benediction, notably in its slow movement.
An American
near-contemporary of Elgar (1857-1934), John Knowles Paine (1839-1906) is far
less known and represents a notable discovery – one of many made by the very dedicated
JoAnn Falletta, whose fine Naxos recordings with the Buffalo Philharmonic and the
Ulster Orchestra regularly explore the works of lesser or simply forgotten
composers with intelligence, skill and considerable sensitivity. Falletta’s
Paine disc with the Ulster ensemble shows the composer’s very considerable
skill at orchestration and his clear absorption of his Germanic training. His
works are not particularly innovative – likely the reason they have not
remained in the repertoire – but all three of those on this CD are well-crafted
and convincing. Paine’s Symphony No. 1 is skillfully designed and
well-orchestrated, thematically pleasant and well-constructed. The As You Like It overture is also tuneful
and moves gracefully throughout, while the longer Tempest symphonic poem is clearly in the mode of Liszt, featuring
six distinct sections played one after the other and skillfully portraying
Ariel, Prospero, Ferdinand and Miranda, Caliban and some of the scenes of
Shakespeare’s play. One thing that makes this CD a particularly felicitous gift
is that the music will almost surely be unfamiliar to the recipient, but the
Romantic mode in which it is written will make it easy to listen to and immediately
accessible.
Those seeking a gift of
more-traditional symphonic repertoire, but still a recording that the recipient
is unlikely to have already, can consider the CD of Schumann’s Third (from a
1961 performance with the Orchestra Sinfonica di Torino della RAI) and Brahms’
Second (from 1962 with the Philharmonia Orchestra) under conductor Carlo Maria
Giulini (1914-2005). This recording from IDIS (Istituto Discografico Italiano)
is labeled “Carlo Maria Giulini Collection, Vol. 1,” and may encourage a
recipient to look forward to further releases. It is also very worthy in its
own right. These are familiar works and ones with which Giulini was frequently
involved – particularly the Brahms, which he performed innumerable times and
frequently recorded. Giulini’s approach to Brahms changed over time, with some of
his recordings being highly propulsive while others are staid, slow and
unashamedly heavy. This one is on the moderate side, as is the Schumann. There
is nothing especially innovative in either interpretation, and neither
orchestra is of the first water in these performances, but both readings are
intelligent, well-thought-through and frequently exhilarating. They will give a
listener the chance to hear a major conductor with whom he or she may not be
highly familiar – a fine gift indeed.
Not all music lovers gravitate
to symphonies, of course, and there are some very fine performances of sonatas
available this year for those who prefer them. Schumann’s three violin sonatas
receive sensitive and elegant readings from Christian Tetzlaff and Lars Vogt on
a new Ondine CD. The first sonata did not much please the composer, who said he
wrote the second – which is nearly twice as long and altogether broader in
scale – because he was dissatisfied with his original attempt. All three
sonatas are in minor keys (Nos. 1 and 3 in A minor, No. 2 in D minor), and all
three show clear evidence of being composed late in the composer’s life. (The
third is actually an expansion of two movements of the F-A-E Sonata, which Schumann co-wrote with Brahms and Albert
Dietrich.) There are a number of fine recordings of the three sonatas, but the
works are not especially well-known, and many chamber-music lovers may not have
a recording – or may have only one and would enjoy an additional view of the
music. Tetzlaff and Vogt handle the sonatas with skill and sure
inter-instrumental communication, passing the themes and accompaniments easily
back and forth and keeping the music’s flow moving smoothly and often
elegantly. Lovers of Schumann and of the violin-and-piano repertoire will find
this well-recorded disc a lovely gift.
For single-instrument
Romantic-era sonatas, a fine choice for gift-giving would be Janina
Fialkowska’s very involved, beautifully phrased performances of Schubert’s
Piano Sonatas No. 13, D. 664, and 18, D. 894. The latter, which dates to 1826,
was much admired by Schumann, who called it the most perfect of Schubert’s
sonatas in both form and conception. It was the last Schubert sonata published
during the composer’s brief life, and it remains a remarkable achievement both
in scale – 37 minutes in Fialkowska’s performance – and in its mood of
serenity, which is rare among Schubert’s sonatas and is nowhere else spun out
at this length or with this elegance. The coupling with D. 664 from 1819 is an
interesting one, since the earlier sonata, which is in three movements, is the
first in which Schubert seems wholly comfortable with Beethoven’s sonata form.
The music itself is more straightforward than in the later sonata, with the
melodic ease and beauty of which Schubert was always capable but without the
underlying complexity of the later work. The Fialkowska CD will be a fine gift
for listeners unfamiliar with these Schubert sonatas, with the Canadian
pianist, or both.
And sonatas are not of
course confined to the Romantic era, although the word “sonata” did mean
somewhat different things in earlier times. There are pleasures galore in a
highly engaging two-SACD set of Corelli chamber sonatas by the Avison Ensemble under
Pavlo Beznosiuk, who directs while playing the violin. The group’s four other
members – Caroline Balding on violin, Richard Tunnicliffe on cello, Paula
Chateauneuf on archlute and Roger Hamilton on harpsichord and organ – are
thoroughly comfortable with Corelli’s style and with their own places within
these finely crafted Baroque pieces. The two sets of sonatas da camera are part of the Avison Ensemble’s project of
recording all of Corelli’s chamber music, but this recording stands perfectly
well on its own, with every performance poised, balanced, carefully constructed
and played with a very high level of artistry. The pacing of the faster
movements, and the balance within them, are particularly impressive. These sonatas
have been popular among performers since their first publication in 1694, but
they are not a “fixture” in many people’s classical-music collections, so this
Avison Ensemble set could be a highly welcome gift for many lovers of Baroque
music presented in top-notch, historically sensitive performances.
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