Shostakovich: Cello Concertos
Nos. 1 and 2. Truls Mørk,
cello; Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vasily Petrenko. Ondine.
$16.99.
Christos Hatzis:
Departures—Concerto for Flute and String Orchestra (2011); Overscript—Concerto
for Flute and Chamber Orchestra (1993/2012). Patrick Gallois, flute;
Thessaloniki State Symphony Orchestra conducted by Alexandre Myrat. Naxos.
$9.99.
Ernst Toch: String Trio (1936);
Adagio elegiaco (1950); Cello Sonata (1929); Divertimento (1925); Violin Sonata
No. 1 (1913). Spectrum Concerts Berlin. Naxos. $9.99.
John Cage: Music for Two
(1984/1987); Three Dances for prepared pianos (1945). Pestova/Meyer Piano
Duo (Xenia Pestova and Pascal Meyer). Naxos. $9.99.
Haskell Small: The Rothko
Room—Journeys in Silence (2010); Visions of Childhood (2011); A Glimpse of
Silence (2013). Haskell Small, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Schumann: Fantasie in C;
Bruckner: Fantasie in G; Zemlinsky: Fantasien über Gedichte von
Richard Dehmel; Brahms: Fantasien. Stanislav Khristenko, piano. Steinway
& Sons. $17.99.
It is inevitable that any
cellist performing the Shostakovich concertos will be compared with Mstislav
Rostropovich, for whom they were written and who gave the first performances of
both, in 1959 and 1966, respectively (the Second actually received its première on Shostakovich’s 60th
birthday, September 25). But if cellists will inevitably stand in the shadow of
Rostropovich when it comes to these works, that does not mean they are doomed
to second-class status in their performances. Quite the opposite, in fact, when
it comes to a cellist as fine as Truls Mørk
and, equally importantly, a conductor as superbly involved in Shostakovich
interpretation as Vasily Petrenko. Yevgeny Mravinsky conducted the First
Concerto at its debut, and Yevgeny Svetlanov led the Second, and while both
were outstanding Soviet-era conductors, Petrenko is something else: a conductor
whose considerations and reconsiderations of the music of Shostakovich
continually shed new light on the composer’s works. And so the collaboration of
Petrenko with Mørk on a new
Ondine CD is an outstanding one. Mørk
certainly has the necessary technique and emotional sensitivity to make these
large, complex works comprehensible and emotionally trenchant; Petrenko, for
his part, has a visceral understanding of this music as well as tremendous
sensitivity to its nuances. The Oslo Philharmonic is not really an ideal
orchestra for these lush but highly angular scores – its overall sound, although
well-balanced, is somewhat bland – but Petrenko brings forth the various
sectional elements to excellent effect, and throughout both concertos, Mørk weaves the cello lines in and out
of the orchestral palette with tremendous skill and admirable sure-handedness.
Rostropovich’s own performances of these concertos remain available – several
different ones, in fact – and they have tremendous historical value as well as
musical validity. But these works transcend any individual soloist and speak to
and through other first-rate performers with a different and equally compelling
voice. Mørk and Petrenko make
them their own, and the result is highly satisfying even for dyed-in-the-wool
admirers of Rostropovich’s versions.
Satisfying in a very
different way is a Naxos recording of flute concertos by Canadian composer
Christos Hatzis (born 1953). Like many contemporary composers, Hatzis draws
influences from a variety of sources beyond traditional classical models – in
his case, all filtered through the lens of Christian spirituality. Thus, Departures, which is a memorial both on
a personal level for Hatzis as well as to the victims of the 2011 tsunami at
Fukushima, Japan, incorporates blues and Japanese music as well as some
incongruous burlesque touches that, in Hatzis’ accretive style, work better
than would otherwise be expected. Overscript
is an even more complex work, managing the highly unusual technical feat of incorporating
Bach’s entire G minor flute concerto, BWV 1056/I – in fragmented form – within
Hatzis’ composition, so that Overscript
becomes a musical commentary on music. An overarching element of these Hatzis
works is that they sound, descriptively, as if they are over-clever and more of
an intellectual exercise than an emotionally communicative one – but in fact
they lie very well on the flute and other instruments and are considerably more
emotive than a description of their derivative elements indicates. Patrick
Gallois is a very effective advocate of this music, and the other soloists in Overscript – Dimitrios Kalpaxidis on
oboe, Georgios Politis on bassoon and Marilena Liakopoulou on harpsichord –
also show a well-wrought combination of understanding of the Baroque and
comprehension of Hatzis’ intentions in reinterpreting Bach. The Thessaloniki
State Symphony Orchestra under Alexandre Myrat may not be a world-class ensemble,
but it is sturdy and serviceable and commands a string section quite strong
enough to put these concertos across effectively. Both these works are world
première recordings, and they
will likely whet many listeners’ appetites for more music by Hatzis, a composer
who is scarcely unusual in the multiplicity of his influences but is decidedly
out of the ordinary in how he combines those elements and uses them to evoke
expressions for a modern audience.
A Naxos recording of chamber
music by Ernst Toch (1887-1964) shows a composer whose expressive success
varies by work and also by the period in which each work was created. Spectrum
Concerts Berlin here offers pieces as early as 1913 and as late as 1950, and
the changes in Toch’s style among these works are quite apparent. Violin Sonata No. 1 is effectively
structured and decidedly in 19th-century mode, with little
originality in design or communication and a serviceable but scarcely original
approach to its thematic material. Divertimento
and the Cello Sonata are
more-advanced works, the former very brief and pointed (its three movements
last only seven minutes) and the latter pleasant, with elements of elegance and
a generally effective use of the cello’s range and expressive ability. This
sonata, however, is not as emotive as the String
Trio, the most effectively communicative music on this CD: it is a work of
strength, passion and dedication, in straightforward three-movement form but
with a level of intensity and personal involvement largely missing in the
earlier-composed works on this disc. The short Allegro elegiaco is expressive as well, but in a
heart-on-its-sleeve way that is somewhat overdone and that belies the sincerity
it intends to project as a memorial to Holocaust victims. Toch’s music is
well-made and shows considerable understanding of the solo instruments and
ensembles for which he created it, but it is not particularly distinctive and
does not have characteristics that would lead a listener unfamiliar with it to
identify it as indelibly “Toch-ian.” As a result, this CD gets a (+++) rating
despite the very high-quality performances that the musicians lavish on these
works.
The performances are also
quite fine on another (+++) CD from Naxos, and here the music is certainly
distinctive in its own way, but it is a way that wears extremely thin quite
quickly. John Cage (1912-1992) remains a controversial figure even today, as
well as a highly influential one. His focuses were many, ranging from a study
of the relationship between performers and audience (as in his famous 4’33”, in which the performer sits
quietly and listens to the audience), to reproducing the sounds and effects of
the Balinese gamelan on Western instruments, to making instruments do things
and produce sounds that they were never intended to create. Music for Two and Three Dances for prepared piano are fair samples of Cage’s
approach, and both would be highly interesting to see in a live performance –
Cage’s works always had a significant theatrical element to them. But as heard
on an audio CD, they are long, overdone and, after only a short time, distinctly
boring. Music for Two includes bowed
piano techniques as well as the strongly percussive ones that Cage favored, and
goes on (and on) for nearly half an hour. Three
Dances for prepared piano has much of the gamelan flavor that Cage fancied
and requires the performers to “prepare” the pianos in such a way that they
make sounds – bangs, yowls, screeches, percussive explosions and more – of
which they are quite capable but that fly in the face of the instrument’s
primary reason for existence. There is, by design, nothing melodious,
harmonically significant or rhythmically graspable in these works: Cage became
a darling of the avant-garde in his time and afterwards by denying the basic
elements of musical structure that had served as building blocks for more than
300 years. More than two decades after Cage’s death, his work remains divisive
and debatable, a basic question being to what extent it can even be called
music. He will continue to be celebrated for his iconoclasm and his willingness
to stretch instruments’ sounds and listeners’ perceptions, but even when
performers throw themselves (to some extent, literally) into his works, as do
Xenia Pestova and Pascal Meyer, the result is something far less than
compelling.
Silence – the absence of
sound – was important to Cage, although in that respect his preoccupations were
nothing new: even Haydn thought it crucial to get the silences right when
composing. Total silence is, of course, the opposite of sound and thus in a
sense the opposite of music even while being a part of it. And the concept of silence can be interestingly
interpreted with music, which is what
Haskell Small (born 1948) tries to do in The
Rothko Room and A Glimpse of Silence.
Small has a particular fascination with silence as interpreted through music:
he is a fine and wide-ranging pianist, and one work with which he is
particularly associated is the more-than-hour-long Música Callada
("Quiet Music") by Catalan composer Frederic Mompou (1893-1987). With
Small’s new MSR Classics CD, devoted entirely to world première recordings of his own music, it
is easy to see the silence/sound dichotomy to which Small is attracted. Parts
of The Rothko Room, which as a whole
is a narrative of the life of Rothko (1903-1970), are tumultuous, while others
make their points quietly or without sound altogether. The extended
single-movement work falls into four distinct parts, each loosely related to
one of the four Rothko paintings on display at the Phillips Collection in
Washington, D.C. A combination of impressionism in the Mussorgsky tradition
with an attempt to paint a musical portrait of Rothko’s life, this is an
ambitious work that will be most meaningful for those who know the specific
Rothko paintings that inspired Small or, at the very least, are familiar with
Rothko’s biography. A Glimpse of Silence,
a shorter and more-straightforward piece, has an overall feeling of quiet and
mysticism, with a predominant mood of serenity. Visions of Childhood is the most immediately appealing work on this
disc. Like Schumann’s Kinderszenen,
to which it traces its heritage, Small’s work is a series of brief scenes in
which an adult looks back at a largely idealized picture of childhood. Small’s
10 scenes take only 15 minutes to perform, and several really do zip by – in
under a minute. The once-upon-a-time approach is set up through the first
piece, “A Long Time Ago,” and continues with lighthearted elements
(“Frolicking,” “School’s Out!”) and some thoughtful ones (“Feeling Lonely,”
“Lullaby”). The juxtapositions are generally quite well managed – the concluding
“Lullaby,” for example, is preceded by “Roller Coaster” – and Visions of Childhood as a whole has a pleasantly
nostalgic feel. Small’s music, especially insofar as it echoes some New Age-y
elements of ethereality, will not be to all tastes, but this (+++) CD is a fair
introduction to the composer/pianist’s thinking in recent years and in
particular to his interest in having his works encompass large themes,
including that of silence, within musical structures that verge on the
miniature.
It is not Schumann’s Kinderszenen but his Fantasie in C, Op. 17 that anchors the
new (++++) Steinway & Sons CD featuring Stanislav Khristenko: his
performance of this work helped lead Khristenko to First Prize at the Cleveland
International Piano Competition last year. Schumann’s Fantasie is an emotionally charged piece with deliberate echoes of
and quotations from Beethoven (it was intended to help raise funds for a
monument to Beethoven in his birthplace, Bonn). It is difficult to sustain for
its half-hour length, but Khristenko has taken its measure and manages a fine
balance between its technical complexity and its emotional heart. Similarly,
Brahms’ late and complex Fantasien, Op.
116, look back to Beethoven in their use of small motivic fragments as
building blocks of grander structures – and here, too, Khristenko approaches
the work with sensitivity as well as the necessary virtuosity in its three Capriccio segments. The Fantasien are seven miniatures that
collectively produce an impact well beyond their individual elements, and
Khristenko manages to communicate this through attention focused on the
individual pieces’ characteristics while never losing sight of Brahms’ overall
structure. This is a particularly impressive performance for a 29-year-old
pianist: Schumann’s Fantasie was
written when the composer was 26, and many of its sentiments are those of a
young and somewhat headstrong man; but the Brahms Fantasien is a work of that composer’s late life, and what Brahms’
communicates here is a level of complexity that also sums up many of his
pianistic techniques and emotional concerns. It says much for Khristenko’s
skill that he can make both these very different works so effective, each in
its own way. And the two other pieces on this CD are fascinating discoveries.
Bruckner’s Fantasie is a brief, quiet
and lyrical work that shows a little-noticed side of the composer. And
Alexander Zemlinsky’s Fantasien über
Gedichte von Richard Dehmel is fascinating. This is a set of four movements
inspired by works written by the same poet whose Verklärte Nacht led to Schoenberg’s masterful 1899 string sextet.
Zemlinsky’s piano work was written a year earlier and in more distinctly
Romantic (indeed, Brahmsian) style. The music itself is poetic, limpid and
often quiet, and Khristenko performs it with the combination of skill and
sensitivity that he displays throughout this highly impressive debut CD.
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