The All-Star Orchestra conducted
by Gerard Schwarz. Programs 1 & 2; 3 & 4; 5 & 6; 7 & 8.
Naxos DVDs. $19.99 each.
Comparisons between Gerard
Schwarz’s All-Star Orchestra TV
series and the justly famous Young
People’s Concerts led by Leonard Bernstein from 1958 to 1972 are
inevitable. Like Bernstein, Schwarz offers a series of programs on various
aspects of classical music, with commentary in the Schwarz series by composers,
performers and various experts rather than – as in Bernstein’s material – by
the conductor himself. Unlike Bernstein, Schwarz offers programs designed for
listeners of all ages, not just young people – and, more intriguingly, mixes
well-known works from the standard concert repertoire with new pieces that even
people steeped in classical music may never have heard before. Bernstein’s
programs reached across age lines by virtue of the strength of Bernstein’s
personality and the excellence of his conducting. Schwarz is a lesser conductor
and by no means a raconteur; his shows reach across generational lines because
of the choice of music and form of commentary. The Schwarz shows are much
better produced – they were done in HD with 19 cameras, and of course all are in
color – but the technical capabilities are not always fully realized. It would
have been good, for example, to show just why passages in Beethoven were
considered unplayable in the composer’s time, or to delve into some specifics
of the difficulties inherent in performing modern works.
Some lines from the
Bernstein shows deservedly became classics, such as the conductor’s remark that
“music does not mean anything” and
his demonstration of that observation by conducting bits of the Richard Strauss
tone poem Don Quixote while offering
a narrative totally different from that actually associated with the music.
There is nothing even remotely that clever in The All-Star Orchestra conducted by Gerard Schwarz. But this series
has pleasures of a different sort – many of them lying in the selection of
music, the juxtaposition of old works and new, and the truly interesting
aspects of music that the eight programs explore.
Most of the works here are
presented complete, as those in the Bernstein series were not – although the
word “complete” has to be stretched a bit in some cases. The first program,
“Music for the Theatre,” offers the complete suite from Stravinsky’s The Firebird, but not the complete
ballet, and the complete second suite from Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé but, again, not the full work
from which the suite is drawn. Still, the suites appear in concert more often
than the full ballets, and the narrative about the Ballet Russes and Sergei
Diaghilev is an interesting one – as is the pairing of the Stravinsky and Ravel
pieces with Bright Sheng’s Brahms-inspired Black
Swan.
The pairing is less engaging
on the second program, since it involves one towering masterpiece, Beethoven’s
Fifth Symphony, along with Harmonium
Mountain by Philip Glass. But the topic here is an intriguing one: “What
Makes a Masterpiece?” The interviews, including ones with orchestral musicians,
make the show interesting, and the extremely different ways in which Beethoven
and Glass employ short rhythmic and melodic elements are intriguing.
There is something worth
watching – and hearing – in every one of these programs. The third, “The New
World and Its Music,” inevitably includes Dvořák’s “New World” symphony, pairing it with Ellen Taaffe
Zwilich’s Avanti! The latter is a
very different take on the American experience, but this program is one of the
lesser ones here – while the fourth, “Politics and Art,” is one of the most
interesting. This focuses on Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 5, a long-popular and
long-controversial work specifically stated by the composer to be his response
to “justified” Soviet criticism but thought by many to conceal critiques of
Stalin’s regime in its apparently triumphal finale. By raising real issues of
music’s place in society, this program delves more deeply into issues than do
many of the others.
The fifth program,
“Relationships in Music,” could have been more intriguing than it is. It
explores the relationship of the Schumanns (Robert and Clara) with Brahms,
which is indeed fascinating, but it avoids some of the more-turbulent and not
unrelated musical relationships of the same time, such as those swirling around
Wagner. And the illustrative works here are not the best choices: Schumann’s
Third Symphony (“Rhenish”) works well, but Brahms’ Academic Festival Overture is largely atypical of the composer and
not the best representation of him – however delightful it is. The sixth show,
“The Living Art Form,” is perhaps the least successful of the eight, since it
is the most didactic and includes only modern works: the third movement of
Richard Danielpour’s Piano Concerto No. 4 (the complete movement, but not the
complete piece); Samuel’s Jones’ Cello Concerto; and Joseph Schwantner’s “The
Poet’s Hour – Soliloquy for Violin.” Although all this music has points of
interest, none of it is especially distinguished, so it does not pull
viewers/listeners into the narrative as does the music in the other programs.
The final DVD in this
series, containing the seventh and eighth programs, is more gripping. The
seventh show, “Music’s Emotional Impact,” could well have been the first, since
it discusses a major element of music’s appeal and does so through the lens of
Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4 – a popular and immediately accessible work. The
modern work here – Blast! by David
Stock – is intended to show a contemporary composer’s handling of the “fate”
motif, but succeeds mostly in showcasing Tchaikovsky’s far greater talent at
pulling an audience’s emotions in the directions in which he wants them to go. The
eighth show, the only one with a composer’s name in its title, is a bit odd and
disappointing. It is called “Mahler: Love, Sorrow and Transcendence,” and
includes a few Rückert-Lieder sung
by mezzo-soprano Nancy Maultsby, the first movement (and only the first movement)
from the Symphony No. 2, and two modern works that do not complement Mahler’s
very well: Augusta Read Thomas’ Of
Paradise and Light and Bernard Rands’ Adieu.
The problem here is interpretative – not in terms of Schwarz’ handling of the
music, which is fine here as in all these shows, but in terms of picking these
specific Mahler pieces to illustrate the show’s theme. The first movement of
the “Resurrection” symphony is indeed funerary, but it marks the funeral of the
hero of the First Symphony, as Mahler himself said – and is supposed to be
followed by five minutes of silence before the work’s second movement, which
leads eventually to the transcendence of the finale. This is not a good
movement to take out of context, but that is what is done with it here. And the
two modern pieces, which ostensibly represent contemporary contemplations of
the age-old themes of life and death, are simply not very effective when
juxtaposed with Mahler’s works.
The All-Star Orchestra conducted by Gerard Schwarz has its share of
ups and downs, and without a central guiding light of Leonard Bernstein’s
caliber, the series never develops the sort of personal audience connection
that Bernstein’s did in a way that makes the Bernstein series timeless despite
its comparatively primitive production techniques and the long-out-of-date
fashions worn by everyone seen in it. Nevertheless, the Schwarz shows have a
great deal going for them, presenting some genuinely thoughtful analysis and
some very involving commentary, with a generally good (if not always
convincing) mixture of masterpieces of the past with works exploring similar
themes in more-recent times. Schwarz himself lacks Bernstein’s considerable
charisma as either host or conductor, but he does a solid, workmanlike job as
the central figure in these musical presentations, and his orchestra – whose
members came together for these shows from multiple U.S. ensembles – plays
efficiently if not always passionately. These are, on balance, fine made-for-TV
programs that will be of most value to people with some interest in classical
music but little understanding of it – although the issues raised in certain
shows will resonate with longtime classical-music lovers as well.
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