Franz Ignaz Beck: Symphonies, Op.
4, Nos. 1-3 and Op. 3, No. 6. Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra
Pardubice conducted by Marek Štilec.
Naxos. $9.99.
Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 2 and
8. Orchestre Révolutionnaire
et Romantique conducted by John Eliot Gardiner. SDG. $18.99.
Gounod: Symphonies Nos. 1-3.
Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana conducted by Oleg Caetani. CPO. $16.99.
Grieg: Complete Symphonic Works,
Volume IV—Symphony in C minor; Piano Concerto. Herbert Schuch, piano; WDR
Sinfonieorchester Köln
conducted by Eivind Aadland. Audite. $19.99 (SACD).
Bruckner: Symphony No. 5.
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt. RCO Live DVD.
$29.99.
Mahler: Symphony No. 9.
Gewandhaus-Orchester Leipzig conducted by Riccardo Chailly. Accentus Music DVD.
$24.99.
From Mozart’s time to
Mahler’s, the symphony developed, grew, expanded and changed to fit new times,
new composers, new forms of emotional expression, and new methods of using the
orchestra to communicate everything from formal elegance and balance to deep
feelings that push the boundaries of symphonic form and force it to be
redefined. Not all the composers who helped the symphony evolve were necessarily
well-known; in other cases, they were known and admired, but not for symphonic
works. Through the years, the symphony showed unending plasticity as composers
took it in many different directions. Franz Ignaz Beck (1734-1809), an almost
exact contemporary of Haydn – the man who solidified symphonic form in ways
recognizable ever since – is scarcely a well-known composer, and his symphonies
of the 1760s are not at the level of Haydn’s of that time or Mozart’s soon
after. But these works, which Beck identified by the older term “Sinfonia,”
helped lay the groundwork for much that came later. A new Naxos CD – one of
several Beck symphony discs from the label, presented by different ensembles –
showcases the first three of Beck’s Op. 4 set (each in four movements) and the
final one from Op. 3 (a three-movement work). What is notable about these
pieces is Beck’s willingness to start exploring emotion and drama within
individual movements and in the symphonies as a whole. Also, Beck gives the
winds far more independence than was customary in his time – anticipating, in
this, Mozart’s later and greater liberation of the wind section. And while
there is nothing profound in Beck’s slow movements, he uses them to provide
moments of relative rest within works that are otherwise propulsive and
forward-looking. This helps establish the symphony as music in which contrast,
within an overarching structure, is the driving force. The Czech Chamber
Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice under Marek Štilec plays these pieces with fine style and just enough
dramatic flair to show Beck’s largely unknown but nevertheless significant
contribution to symphonic development in the 18th century.
Beethoven’s contributions
are far, far better known, and they have remained both directly and indirectly
influential ever since his symphonies were written. However, there are still intriguing elements
of Beethoven to explore, evidence being the fascinating live recording by John
Eliot Gardiner and Orchestre Révolutionnaire
et Romantique of the two least-played and perhaps least-understood of the
Beethoven symphonies, Nos. 2 and 8. These are period-instrument performances,
but more importantly, they are period-practice performances, which mean that
Gardiner and the orchestra have gone back to Beethoven’s own time, insofar as
that is possible, to make decisions on balance, phrasing, tempo, rhythm, and
dynamics. It also means that Gardiner has carefully avoided performing No. 2 as
an anticipation of No. 3, the “Eroica,” but instead has highlighted its
Mozartean elements and shown the ways in which it is clearly a successor to No.
1 – but with a whole slew of uniquely Beethovenian elements (most notably in
the finale, but by no means only there). This performance is tremendously
exciting and nothing short of revelatory. And No. 8 is on the same very high
level. Beethoven’s Eighth is often looked at as a “small” symphony and
sometimes even as a throwback, but Gardiner takes seriously the things that
Beethoven did to indicate that this is not a light or lightweight work at all –
for example, the composer’s insistence on parts of the first movement being
played fff, a designation very rare
in Beethoven and one clearly intended to get the orchestra to give all that it
can to the music. Gardiner also plumbs the humor in this
symphony-without-a-slow-movement, and manages to make the highly unusual finale
(whose form is unique in Beethoven’s music) into a very speedy, very
well-articulated tour de force as
well as an extended exercise in musical wit. What this SDG disc shows with
considerable clarity is how Beethoven, in No. 2, brought the symphony into new
territory after absorbing lessons from Mozart’s and Haydn’s works – and then,
in No. 8, lifted it into even newer realms by showing how a work that is
Haydnesque on the surface can contain elements that pave the way not only for
Beethoven’s own later symphonic work (the Ninth) but also for the music of
Schubert, Schumann, Mendelssohn and others.
Indeed, Beethoven’s
influence can scarcely be overestimated: it is, in a different way, as strong
as that of Haydn. One composer whose symphonies show both Beethovenian and
Haydnesque influence is Charles Gounod, who is best known for his operas but
who did create two symphonies in the mid-1850s. Both these works have a French
flair atop their essentially Germanic symphonic structure – the difference is
especially evident in their lyrical passages – but both nevertheless display
their influences unashamedly. No. 1 is clearly indebted to Haydn, whom Gounod very
much admired. Interestingly, however, although its third movement, marked Scherzo, is in fact closer to a minuet,
it is one in a French rather than Austrian style. No. 2 has more of Beethoven
about it, although here the pleasantly undulating Larghetto possesses pastoral elements more evocative of the French
countryside than of anything Germanic. On a new CPO disc, Oleg Caetani and the
Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana offer performances of these works that are
straightforward, expressive and very well-paced, with Caetani nicely bringing
out some of Gounod’s interesting instrumental touches. And the CD contains a
very intriguing bonus: an eight-minute fragment of a third symphony, a piece
that Gounod worked on just a few years before his death in 1893. Never before
recorded, this work – part of a first movement and a short but apparently
complete second – has a darker atmosphere than do the first two symphonies,
despite its home key of C. And it shows greater individuality of style than do
the two complete symphonies, although it scarcely seems to have progressed as
dramatically as symphonic writing in general did during the 35 or so years after
Gounod wrote his first two symphonies.
Beethoven’s influence
continued to be highly significant throughout the 19th century and
even beyond, not only directly but also through the works of composers who were
strongly influenced by him and, in their turn, influenced others. Thus, the
sole symphony of Edvard Grieg, written when the composer was barely into his 20s
(in 1864), exhibits derivative elements not so much of Beethoven directly but
of Beethoven as filtered through Schumann, Mendelssohn and, even more clearly,
Niels Gade – the most prominent Danish symphonist of his time and the man who
directly told Grieg to write something of significance (which turned out to be
this symphony). The fourth volume of Audite’s first-rate survey of Grieg’s
complete orchestral music, performed by the WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln under Eivind Aadland, features
the symphony in a performance that gives it everything it is due – which is to
say that Aadland does not overestimate the work’s value but plays it straight,
allowing its manifest charms to display themselves but also permitting its
structural imperfections to come through clearly. For example, the finale
features a chorale theme that seems to be about to bring the work to an
apotheosis but instead merely disappears, leaving the movement to continue as
before. Grieg himself withdrew the symphony after several partial performances
and wrote that it was never to be played, but stopped short of destroying it;
it disappeared into archival status until it was revived in the Soviet Union in
1980. It is certainly worth hearing, especially when played as well as it is
here, but it is scarcely central to Grieg’s output. His Piano Concerto,
however, is of crucial importance,
and it shares the SACD with the symphony and gets a grand, sweeping and
altogether winning performance from Herbert Schuch. Grieg wrote the concerto
just a few years after completing the symphony, in 1868, but its far greater
maturity and more-expert handling of the orchestra are evident throughout.
Grieg was himself a pianist, and he managed in the concerto to make the
instrument pre-eminent without ever making the orchestra subsidiary; he also
succeeded here in producing a work of Norwegian nationalism, the finale in
particular drawing on folk dances and rhythms of Norway. Throughout the
concerto, the influence of Schumann –whose sole piano concerto is in the same key
of A minor – is quite clearly felt, and since Schumann’s orchestral music ties
quite clearly to Beethoven’s, the influence of Beethoven as symphonist pervades
Grieg’s concerto to at least the same degree as it does his symphony.
A decade after Grieg wrote
his symphony, Bruckner wrote his Fifth, which is nowadays his least-performed
mature symphony and in many ways his most problematic. Filled with contrapuntal
elements, structured so that the first movement lays a broad and deep
foundation on which the other three movements are constructed until the finale
provides a long-delayed climax, and pervaded by pizzicato to an extent that has
sometimes led to it being called the “pizzicato symphony,” Bruckner’s Fifth is
nevertheless redolent of earlier symphonic influences – notably that of
Schubert. A sprawling work that can easily degenerate into an episodic series
of poorly connected parts, Bruckner’s Fifth gets a knowing, sure-handed and
very well-played rendition from the excellent Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra on
a DVD recorded live in October 2013 and released on the ensemble’s own label.
Nikolaus Harnoncourt is far better known for his Bach and other Baroque work
than for his handling of the Romantics, but he has certainly taken the measure
of this Bruckner symphony, shaping it knowingly and intelligently and with the
same attention to its architectural elements that he brings to Bach’s music.
Indeed, Bruckner’s chorales here, which trace back to Bach, are handled with
particular care, and the overall architectural sense of the symphony comes
through with a stature that recalls the larger, cathedral-like structure of
Bach’s Passion settings. Harnoncourt
does drive the tempo rather hard from time to time, but he is almost always
convincing in doing so – and the only real issue with this recording is that it
is a DVD rather than CD or SACD,
which means its visuals are a big part of its impact. They are not always to
its benefit. At a live concert, audience members can decide where to look and
when, and can even elect to close their eyes from time to time and simply bask
in the musical experience. Certainly eyes-closed listening is possible with a
DVD as well, but it somehow misses that point to make a purchase issued in a
visual medium and then bypass the visuals. Watching the DVD, though, requires
watching just what the director chooses to show at any given time, and the
visuals are not always the ones that a listener at a concert would select. Also,
the DVD contains no bonus material and is thus a costly way of obtaining a
performance of Bruckner’s Fifth; but Harnoncourt’s reading is so good that
listeners – that is to say, viewers – may decide that the investment is
worthwhile.
A similar form of thinking is
needed for another fine DVD recording, the Accentus Music release of Mahler’s
Ninth featuring the Gewandhaus-Orchester Leipzig led by Riccardo Chailly.
Interestingly, Chailly made a recording of this symphony a decade ago with the
Concertgebouw Orchestra – but his new one, recorded live in September 2013, is
tauter and altogether more focused. The symphony as conceived by Mahler,
expanded to the point of gigantism (some would say beyond that point) and
filled with a degree of emotionalism never before attempted, much less
attained, reached a pinnacle beyond which it never quite moved – later
symphonists needed to go in different directions. Still, the underlying
symphonic structures were very much respected by Mahler even as he expanded
them and pulled them into new shapes – just as Beck and Beethoven did in their
time. The Ninth, Mahler’s last completed symphony, gets a committed, strongly
emotive performance from Chailly, and the orchestra – whose experience with
Mahler dates back to the days when Bruno Walter was its conductor, from 1929 to
1933 – plays the music with strength and the utmost commitment. In some ways,
the video format here is more useful than in Harnoncourt’s Bruckner Fifth,
because this DVD includes a half-hour bonus in which Chailly discusses the
music and his feelings about interpreting it. In other ways, the issues of
having the performance on video rather than in audio-only format remain the
same – and in one case, the video is unintentionally amusing, when the camera
shows a triangle being gently struck during the second movement but no triangle
sound is heard. A disconnect between audio and video is inevitable in
classical-music DVDs – audio cannot pick up everything that video sees, and no
video director can go along perfectly with the interpretation as it is being
presented live. So any issues of this type involving this recording are common
to the field, not unique to this specific release. They are still worth
considering for listeners/viewers, however. Chailly’s very understanding, very
well-played performance and his interesting discussion of the symphony may make
this a worthwhile acquisition for Mahler lovers despite the inevitable clash
between the sonic and visual elements of the presentation.
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