Bruckner: Symphony No. 8.
Konzerthausorchester Berlin conducted by Mario Venzago. CPO. $16.99.
Bruch: Complete Works for Violin
and Orchestra, Volume 1—Violin Concerto No. 2; Scottish Fantasy; Adagio
appassionato. Antje Weithaas, violin; NDR Radiophilharmonie conducted by
Hermann Bäumer. CPO. $16.99.
Zdeněk Fibich: Orchestral
Works, Volume 3—Othello; Záboj, Slavoj and Luděk;
Toman and the Wood Nymph; The Tempest; Spring. Czech National Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Marek Štilec.
Naxos. $9.99.
The exceptionally
interesting CPO Bruckner cycle conducted by Mario Venzago reaches its
penultimate release with Venzago’s reading of Symphony No. 8 – for which, once
again, he has made a superb choice of orchestra. One of the main distinguishing
characteristics of this Bruckner sequence is the conductor’s use of different
ensembles for different symphonies, his intention being to highlight the ways
in which the sound of each symphony is distinct by performing it with an
orchestra whose own sound elicits what Venzago believes Bruckner intended. This
is more than an academic exercise: Bruckner’s symphonies too often come across
as massive gouts of sonic grandeur throughout, but Venzago shows persuasively
that they have clarity and even delicacy that is all too frequently unobserved
or unnoticed. So Venzago used the Tapiola Sinfonietta for Nos. 0 and 1; the
Northern Sinfonia for No. 2; the Berner Symphonieorchester for Nos. 3, 6 and 9;
the Sinfonieorchester Basel for Nos. 4 and 7; and now the Konzerthausorchester
Berlin (known from its founding in 1952 until 2006 as the Berlin Symphony
Orchestra) for the massive and highly complex No. 8. This is an inspired
choice: the orchestra has richness in the strings, a burnished brass section
and woodwinds that are quite able to hold their own amid the other sections. As
usual nowadays, Venzago performs the 1890 version of this symphony, which is
considerably different from its original 1887 version (which Georg Tintner
recorded for Naxos back in 1996 and Franz Welser-Möst has conducted more recently, but which remains very rarely
heard in concert or on disc). The huge scope of the work and Bruckner’s very
carefully designed relationships among the movements produce a symphony that is
at once tightly knit and broadly expansive. Venzago not only understands this
intellectually – he is a very thoughtful conductor – but also knows how to
bring out both the work’s forward-looking design and its tremendous emotional
impact. The Konzerthausorchester Berlin has a great deal to do with this,
playing with sumptuousness, firm rhythmic control and sectional balance so good
that it is always possible to follow the complexities of Bruckner’s thematic
groups and rhythm changes and to feel their impact – as, for instance, in the
choice of 2/4 time for the trio of the third movement rather than the much more
typical 3/4. This is above all a dramatic symphony, its emotional sweep
capturing listeners at the start and continuing through a finale that eventually
recalls themes from all four movements. Venzago carefully builds sections
within the movements, the entire movements, and the overall symphony with great
care and skill, and the result is a thrilling and highly moving performance
featuring first-rank orchestral sound that beautifully matches the composer’s
emotive qualities. Only the Symphony No. 5 remains to be released in Venzago’s
Bruckner cycle – an odd choice for the final building block, but one that, on
the basis of all he has done so far, Venzago is likely to prove a
well-considered and well-thought-out one.
Another cycle on CPO is just
beginning, and this one too has fascinating elements. It will offer the
complete works for violin and orchestra by the notoriously prickly and
difficult Max Bruch, who for most listeners is a one-work composer – known
solely for his violin concerto. But Bruch wrote three violin concertos, and the decision to launch this series by
featuring No. 2 is a bold and highly interesting one. Bruch was a marvelous
tunesmith, spinning long-line slow movements so gorgeous melodically and so
balanced in orchestration that it is perfectly possible to be swept away by
their beauty to such an extent as to be disappointed by the frequently more
workmanlike faster movements that succeed or surround them. Antje Weithaas
clearly sees and accepts Bruch as a poet; but at the same time, she
acknowledges the structural skill he brings to his works even in their
less-inspired elements. The Violin Concerto No. 2 comes across as something of
a parallel to Schumann’s Piano Concerto: the long first movement can stand on
its own as a fantasy, making it difficult to integrate the second and third
movements in such a way as to produce a convincing whole. Weithaas does a
first-rate job of this: the opening movement sings, swoons and explores with
transcendent beauty, and the second and third – although they are not its equal
– come across as more than mere appendages. This is a highly satisfying
performance of the concerto, immensely helped by the elegant accompaniment by
the NDR Radiophilharmonie under Hermann Bäumer. The Scottish
Fantasy, one of the few works beyond the first violin concerto for which
Bruch is at least somewhat known, also sounds splendid here, its folkloric
elements clearly at the service of a concerto-worthy violin part that stands
above the orchestra’s while still being integrated into the ensemble. By turns
emotionally stirring, graceful and rhythmically bouncy, the Scottish Fantasy here sounds like a
folk-song-based suite for violin and orchestra in which both soloist and
conductor show a high level of sensitivity to the music’s nuances. Also here,
and very welcome, is the Adagio
appassionato, Op. 57, which Bruch originally intended as the first movement
of what would have become his fourth violin concerto. As so often in Bruch, the
melodies are stirring and passionate, and the piece emerges as an extended
fantasy – much as the opening of the second concerto does, but in this case
without added movements to complement the work or distract from it. This is an
excellent first volume in what promises to be a thoroughly delightful exploration
of the music of a man whose personality was so difficult that it infected many
people’s regard for his work. Nearly a century after Bruch’s death in 1920, it
is now becoming possible to evaluate his music without needing to know about,
or pay attention to, its biographical surroundings.
It is also high time for a
reconsideration of the music of Zdeněk
Fibich (1850-1900), who has lain so deeply in the shadows of Dvořák and Smetana that he has been all
but invisible. The third volume in a very fine Naxos cycle featuring the Czech
National Symphony Orchestra conducted by Marek Štilec shows Fibich to particularly good advantage in five tone
poems composed around the same time as Smetana’s Má Vlast and a decade or more before the ones Dvořák wrote based on ballads by Karel
Erben. It is very easy to hear the many folklike elements of Fibich’s music in
these pieces, and to hear some striking cadential similarities with the work of
Smetana (in particular). The two Shakespeare-based tone poems, Othello and The Tempest, are particularly effective encapsulations of the
emotional core of those plays, with tone-painting that is very well-wrought if,
on the whole, rather straightforward. Záboj,
Slavoj and Luděk and Toman and the
Wood Nymph trace their origin to Czech folk tales, and both build
effectively and recount their stories with appropriate measures of (in the
first case) grandeur and (in the second) lovesickness. And Spring is fascinating because of what it is not: it does not simply portray the season as a bright emergence
from winter, but shows it to be far more variegated than seasonal tone-painting
usually does. It is probably inevitable to compare Fibich with Dvořák and Smetana, noting that he does
not have the melodic gifts of the former or the storytelling drama of the
latter. But while this is true, it is also unfair: Dvořák lived to be 62 and did much of his most-popular work in his
50s, while Smetana lived to age 60 and finished Má Vlast when he was 55. Fibich died before his 50th
birthday, and much of his work as heard in the first three volumes of this
series is early: all the tone poems in this volume were written when he was in
his 20s or 30s. So while it may be true that Fibich lacked some of the inborn
gifts of Dvořák and Smetana, it
may also be true that he never had the chance to develop fully the talent that
he undeniably possessed. The tone poems heard here, all of them very
well-orchestrated and played with considerable élan, continue to show what this
series’ first two volumes did: that Fibich is most certainly deserving of the
rediscovery that he is now beginning to receive.
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