Bruch: Violin Concerto No. 1;
Bartók: Violin Concerto No. 1; Korngold: Violin Concerto; Williams:
Theme from “Schindler’s List.” Glenn Dicterow, violin; New York
Philharmonic conducted by Lorin Maazel (Bruch), Alan Gilbert (Bartók), David Robertson (Korngold) and
John Williams (Williams). New York Philharmonic. $16.99.
Reinecke: Cello Concerto; John
Tavener: Threnos, for cello solo; Schumann: Adagio and Allegro for Cello and
Orchestra; Bloch: Suite No. 1 for cello solo; Osvaldo Golijov: Mariel, for
cello and marimba. Michael Samis, cello; Eric Willie, marimba; Gateway
Chamber Orchestra conducted by Gregory Wolynec. Delos. $16.99.
Fauré: Masques et
bergamasques; Fantaisie for Flute; Pelléas et Mélisande Suite;
Berceuse for Violin and Orchestra; Élégie for Cello and
Orchestra; Dolly; Pavane. Demarre McGill, flute; Alexander Velinzon,
violin; Efe Baltacigil, cello; Seattle Symphony Chorus; Seattle Symphony
conducted by Ludovic Morlot. Seattle Symphony Media. $16.99.
Dohnányi: Symphony No. 2;
Two Songs. Evan Thomas Jones, baritone; Florida State University Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Alexander Jiménez.
Naxos. $9.99.
Messiaen: Turangalîla-Symphonie.
Angela Hewitt, piano; Valérie
Hartmann-Claverie, ondes Martenot; Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted
by Hannu Lintu. Ondine. $16.99 (SACD).
The position of
concertmaster is one about whose intricacies audiences know little. It carries considerable
administrative leadership responsibility as well as a requirement that the individual
have virtuoso-level talent that he or she is willing to subsume within the
requirements of leading the violins and, in effect, the entire ensemble – no
matter who may happen to be conducting at any given concert. Glenn Dicterow’s
amazing 34-year tenure as New York Philharmonic concertmaster, the longest in
the orchestra’s history, is therefore quite deserving of the celebration it
receives in a new CD and handsome booklet on the orchestra’s own label. Dicterow’s
solo-quality playing finally gets a chance to flourish for listeners at home,
as he shows himself to be master of the Romantic and post-Romantic repertoire –
playing four works under four different conductors with sure-handedness,
interpretative solidity and great skill. The Bruch concerto was recorded in
2009, the Bartók concerto in
2012, Korngold’s concerto in 2008, and the short Schindler’s List encore in 2006, so none of these performances
dates to the early years of Dicterow, for whom the 2013-14 season was his last.
Now 65, Dicterow shows considerable maturity in all these readings, providing
sumptuous tone, unfailingly careful integration with the orchestra he led for
so many years, and sensitivity to the nuances of the four conductors with whom
he works on this CD. It cannot be said that soloist or conductors bring any
significant surprises to the performances or that Dicterow finds more in the
music than others have discovered: these are essentially middle-of-the-road
interpretations that explore the works’ beauties, emotions and structures
without delving especially deeply into them. It is the sheer skill of
Dicterow’s playing that is attractive here, more than any way in which he
elicits specific meaning from the music. Yet he is at home quite as thoroughly
in the better-known and less-known pieces, as comfortable with the Romanticism
of Bruch as with the post-Romantic approach of Bartók. And perhaps that is what stands best as a tribute to
Dicterow’s skill: of necessity, a concertmaster has to be adept at handling a
huge number of works – far more than a typical virtuoso soloist must know – and
has to be willing and able to sound good in a wide variety of styles, while
accepting and enhancing each conductor’s individual handling of each piece of
music. This is what Dicterow did so well for more than three decades; and if
this tributary release shows only one aspect of his skill, it shows it to very
fine effect indeed.
The solo-cello skill of
Michael Samis is displayed more conventionally on a new Delos CD that gives
Samis plenty of chances to show his virtuosic mettle. But this is an unusual
disc, and a particularly enjoyable one, because of the works selected and the
inclusion of solo pieces as well as ones for cello and orchestra. Furthermore,
the CD provides a chance to explore some less-known corners of the cello
repertoire. The 1864 concerto by Carl Reinecke (1824-1910), here receiving its
world première recording, was
written smack in the middle of Romanticism and early in Reinecke’s
compositional life. Even today, Reinecke is far better known as a conductor,
pianist and, most of all, teacher (of Bruch, Grieg, Stanford, Janáček, Albéniz and many others), than as a composer. This concerto
indicates that a reconsideration may be in order: although it is very much of
its time, it is elegantly crafted and highly sensitive to the cello’s
capabilities, and has genuine musicality underlying its virtuoso requirements.
It contrasts interestingly with the Schuman Adagio
and Allegro – a slighter work of effective contrasts and pleasant
sonorities, heard in an orchestration by Ernest Ansermet. Bloch’s suite and the
very modern works by Tavener and Golijov give Samis chances to show his
considerable abilities to produce lovely sounds while exploring the technical
and emotional range of his instrument. The contrast between cello and marimba
in Golijov’s work is particularly interesting from a sonic point of view,
although the music itself does not have much to say. In all, this is a highly
intriguing disc whose contrast between Romantic and much later music is only
one of its attractions.
The quality is also quite
high in the new Seattle Symphony CD on the orchestra’s own label, another disc
showing the excellence that conductor Ludovic Morlot brings to French music, with
which he has considerable affinity. Seventy minutes of Fauré may be more than most listeners are
accustomed to hearing at one time, but the CD certainly shows the variety of the
composer’s music, which became more personal from his early works to his late
ones, the latter including jazz and somewhat atonal elements while the earlier
ones were firmly in the Romantic tradition. Morlot misses an opportunity to
present some of Fauré’s most
interesting and unusual works, such as the complete eight-movement Masques et bergamasques rather than the
much more often heard four-movement suite; actually, the 1887 Pavane, heard on this disc with the
optional choral part, later became the eighth and final movement of Masques et bergamasques. Morlot explores
each short piece here with delicacy and care – and in fact, every piece on the
CD is short, if you look at Masques et
bergamasques as four separate movements, the Pelléas et Mélisande Suite as another four,
and Dolly (the 1894-97 suite for piano
four hands, as orchestrated by Rabaud in 1906) as a set of six. Although Fauré was not a miniaturist per se, he had considerable skill in
evoking a mood or particular form of expression within a brief period of time,
and it is that skill that comes through most clearly on this CD. Fauré, like Reinecke, was a well-known
and highly respected teacher – of Ravel, Enescu, Koechlin and Nadia Boulanger,
among others – and this was a role in which his clear familiarity with
instrumental capability surely stood him well. That comfort level is evident in
the works for flute, violin and cello on this CD, and indeed, the disc as a
whole shows Fauré to be highly
accomplished in instrumental combinations of all sorts.
Fauré (1845-1924) was strongly imbued with Romantic sensibility, even
when he moved beyond it, while Ernő
Dohnányi (1877-1960) embraced
Romanticism as a technique without having lived through the period of its
flourishing. The Two Songs on a new
Naxos CD date to 1912 and show, in this world première recording, the vestiges of Romantic art-song settings: both Gott and Sonnensehnsucht (“Longing for the Sun”), using texts by Wilhelm
Conrad Gomoll (1877-1951), are very much in the lieder tradition as interpreted and reconfigured by Mahler,
although their sound is quite different from that of Mahler’s songs for voice
and orchestra. Dohnányi’s
Second Symphony is considerably later, written in 1945 and not put into final
form until 1957, but its roots in Romanticism are apparent. It is passionate
and intense, filled with struggle and intensity that seem to emerge from within
rather than being, as might be expected in light of the work’s date, in some
way connected to World War II – although there is an air of controlled
militarism to some portions of the work. The longest and most complex movement
is the finale, which harks back, in Brahmsian fashion, to Bach (although,
again, without sounding like Brahms, any more than the songs sound like
Mahler). The principal part of the last movement consists of variations and a
fugue on Bach’s Komm Süsser Tod, which at the
movement’s end is combined with the symphony’s opening theme to produce the
work’s climax. The Florida State University Symphony Orchestra plays the
music gamely under Alexander Jiménez,
but it is not really an ideal ensemble for a work of this scale and scope,
sounding somewhat thin and strained at various points. Jiménez himself is not the piece’s best
advocate: the symphony tends to drag in spots and lacks an overall sense of
scale and scope, and the molto con
sentimento element of the second movement gets short shrift. This is thus a
(+++) recording: the music has considerable interest that is not fully
communicated in the performance.
Nor is the Finnish Radio
Symphony Orchestra’s rendition of Messiaen’s Turangalîla-Symphonie, although a fine
one in many ways, worthy of complete recommendation – although it certainly deserves
a high (+++) rating. Hannu Lintu paces most of this huge work well, and
Ondine’s SACD sound is quite helpful in elucidating the difficult piano part as
well as the otherworldly impression of the ondes Martenot. Both solo
instruments are played very well indeed. The difficulty with the music lies in
keeping the 10-movement work flowing, finding a way for its disparate elements
to coalesce around the theme of romantic love and death, which is the
symphony’s central concern. It is here that this performance falls a bit short:
the work sprawls a little too much for cohesiveness, and while individual
elements are convincing, other specific parts (such as the sixth movement) are
less so. The three primary recurring themes – love theme, flower theme, and
intense and frightening “statue theme” – are not always brought forth clearly
in their multiple guises, so the careful structural underpinnings of the music are
less clear than they could be. Nevertheless, this Turangalîla-Symphonie interpretation has
many salient points, with Lintu having a strong sense of the driving rhythms of
the frenetic fifth movement and not shying away from the complexities of the
entirely atonal seventh. The details of Lintu’s reading are pointed and
careful; what the performance lacks is an overall feeling of connectedness – an
admittedly difficult thing to achieve in a work that was originally intended to
be in the conventional four movements (Nos. 1, 4, 6 and 10) and that grew by
accretion to its 10-movement final structure. The transcendent quality of love
– specifically the love of Tristan and Isolde – is the foundation of the Turangalîla-Symphonie, but
Messiaen does not always make that love and its
transformational-yet-frightening elements easy for the audience to perceive and
explore. The symphony dates to 1946-48 – essentially the same time period as
Dohnányi’s Second Symphony – and Lintu’s recording shows
the care with which Messiaen built the symphony, but does not fully deliver its
impact.
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