Bruckner: Symphony No. 5.
Tapiola Sinfonietta conducted by Mario Venzago. CPO. $16.99.
Tchaikovsky: Symphonies Nos. 1-6;
Manfred Symphony; Nocturne, Op. 19, No. 4; “Snegurochka”—excerpts; Francesca da
Rimini; “Romeo and Juliet”—duet; “The Voyevode”—Overture and Dance of the
Haymaiden; The Tempest; “Pique Dame”—Prelude and Finale; “Iolanta”—Prelude;
Hamlet. Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra of Moscow Radio conducted by
Vladimir Fedoseyev. Relief. $39.99 (6 CDs).
Schubert: Symphonies Nos. 2 and
6. Sinfonieorchester Basel conducted by Dennis Russell Davies.
Sinfonieorchester Basel. $18.99.
Woldemar Bargiel: Complete
Orchestral Music, Volume One—Symphony in C; Prometheus Overture; Overture to a
Tragedy; Medea Overture. Siberian Symphony Orchestra conducted by Dmitry
Vasilyev. Toccata Classics. $18.99.
Mendelssohn: A Midsummer Night’s
Dream; Overtures—Ruy Blas; The Hebrides; Overture in C, “Trumpet”; The Fair
Melusine; Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage. Royal Scottish National Orchestra
conducted by Walter Weller (Midsummer,
Ruy Blas); Gewandhausorchester Leipzig conducted by Kurt Masur (other overtures). Brilliant Classics.
$11.99 (2 CDs).
Mario Venzago concludes one
of the most thought-provoking and thoughtful Bruckner cycles ever with what may
be the most controversial of all his already-controversial interpretations.
Venzago, who has selected various orchestras for his recordings for CPO so as
to match orchestral sonority to the way he believes each Bruckner symphony
should sound, uses the 41-member Tapiola Sinfonietta for Bruckner’s very large,
very complex, very long and very difficult Symphony No. 5 – a work whose
grandiosity few would dispute. Venzago disputes it, picking the same ensemble
for this work that he used for Symphonies Nos. 0 and 1 (he conducted the
Northern Sinfonia for No. 2, the Berner Symphonieorchester for Nos. 3, 6 and 9,
the Sinfonieorchester Basel for Nos. 4 and 7, and the Konzerthausorchester
Berlin in No. 8, the only live recording of his cycle). Venzago is a highly
cerebral conductor and a very careful researcher, and he argues persuasively
for his handling of Symphony No. 5, which he connects not only to Schubert
(many other conductors now accept the Schubert-Bruckner connection) but also to
Louis Spohr. Furthermore, Venzago asserts that Symphony No. 5 requires much
quicker tempos than it usually receives, with the result that his performance
comes in at just 60 minutes while many others run well over 70 (Lorin Maazel
recorded one that lasted 80). By turning this symphony into a comparatively light,
transparent, fleet-footed work, Venzago has either rediscovered elements of
Bruckner that others have missed for more than a century or has perverted the
entire meaning and grandeur of the music. This is certain to be a polarizing
performance. The real question, though, is not whether it is different from
others – it most certainly is – but whether it works on its own terms. That is
similar to questions that used to be raised about Beethoven’s metronome
markings (indicating much faster tempos than most conductors were accustomed to
follow) and Bach’s dance movements (which can be performed at a stately pace or
one more akin to that of peasant country dances). It is unlikely that Bruckner
lovers will want Venzago’s No. 5 as their sole version of the symphony, but it
would be a shame if they did not have it as their second, or even third. It is
a revelatory performance, with a clarity and, yes, a speed so unusual in
Bruckner that it shatters the myth of this composer as a staid, dully religious
creator of impressively cathedral-like but essentially plodding structures.
There is a vivacity to Venzago’s Fifth that distinguishes it from all other
performances, and the playing itself makes Venzago’s argument for this approach
more effectively than do his very-well-chosen words. This is not a Bruckner
Fifth for everyone, but it is a fascinating view of the music and composer, and
it serves as a remarkable capstone to a Bruckner cycle that is filled with
thoughtfulness and highly unusual approaches.
The conductor’s thoughtfulness
is evident as well in the excellent Tchaikovsky cycle led by Vladimir Fedoseyev
– although the packaging of this release on the oddly named Relief label is so
bad, so sloppy, that it cries out for reconsideration and reworking. These live
recordings by the Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra of Moscow Radio (founded in
1930 as the Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra and still better-known by that
name) were made at various times over a quarter-century, from 1984 to 2009. The
orchestra’s complement surely changed during that time period, but its sound
remained remarkably consistent and is perfect for this music, with enormously
rich and warm strings, burnished brass, piquant woodwinds and forceful
percussion. For emotion-drenched music such as this, it is hard to imagine a
better-sounding ensemble. And Fedoseyev is a wonderful Tchaikovsky conductor –
who, like Venzago (albeit to a lesser extent), is not afraid to take chances
with canonical works. For example, Fedoseyev takes the first movement of
Symphony No. 1 and the finale of Symphony No. 3 very slowly, an aural shock at
first but soon afterwards a convincing approach that plumbs the music deeply.
He embraces the episodic nature of the first movement of No. 4 instead of
trying to gloss it over with quick tempos, and the result is an impressive
level of grandeur. In the Manfred
Symphony, most of his tempos are speedy, so that the work progresses with
greater forward impetus than it usually receives – but he takes the second
movement, Vivace, unusually slowly, a decision that, again, is
initially odd but soon becomes convincing because of the excellent attention to
detail that accompanies it. The tempo oddities pervade the non-symphonic works
as well: in Francesca da Rimini, for
example, Fedoseyev creates a greater-than-usual contrast between the “blowing
winds” sections and the meltingly beautiful ones in which Francesca tells her
sad story. Every piece here has something to recommend it – but very little in
the packaging does. Is the conductor’s name properly transliterated as
Fedoseyev, Fedosseyev, or Fedossejev? It depends on where you look. Is Op. 18 called
The Tempest or The Storm, and does it date to 1873 or 1888? Again, it depends. (The
work heard here is The Tempest of
1873, not The Storm, which dates to
1864.) Is the Hamlet overture from
1867 or 1888? (It is from 1888 but, if it helps, is Op. 67a, although here
listed as Op. 67.) How many tracks are there on the CD containing Symphony No.
3? The answer is 11, but the actual track listing shows only 10 and omits a
track for one piece altogether. Is there a work called Romeo and Julia, or is it Romeo
& Julia, or Romeo + Julia Fantasy
Ouverture? It depends on where you are in the packaging – but one thing
that is certain is that it is not the
famous overture but a vocal duet, completed by Sergey Taneyev (who is never mentioned),
for an unfinished opera about the doomed lovers. And it does not date to “ca. 1880” or to “1869, 1870
+ 1880,” as listed in various places, but to 1893. And on and on the errors of
commission and omission go, to such a point that one sentence about the
orchestra performing in “Pragrue” is barely a hiccup in the parade of mistakes.
To mar performances this good with presentation this bad is a real shame, but
thank goodness listeners can largely ignore the packaging while listening to
the excellence of the playing and conducting.
Thankfully, both performance
and presentation are high-quality in the Sinfonieorchester Basel’s recording of
Schubert’s Symphonies Nos. 2 and 6 on the orchestra’s own label. Despite its
large size, this ensemble performs these symphonies with lightness and
elegance, and Dennis Russell Davies is firmly at the orchestra’s helm and thoroughly
comfortable with the lilt and spirit of these early Schubert symphonies.
Symphony No. 2 has a particularly weighty opening movement, which
includes three separate sections (a technique that in some ways looks forward
to Bruckner); this gives way to three lighter movements, including a finale
that is as jocular as the first movement is serious. The symphony can sound
rather disconnected because of the movements’ differing character, but Davies
makes it all work within the context of warmth and high spirits. No. 6,
sometimes called the “Little C Major” to distinguish it from the “Great” No. 9,
is not really all that small, although its Rossinian themes (especially in the
finale) and its overall feeling of light-operatic progress keep it on the
pleasant and whimsical side throughout. The orchestra handles Davies’ emphases
and tempo changes smoothly and with ease in both these works, and the live
recording has an ebullience and, frequently, a joviality that makes the
symphonies a joy to hear.
Hearing any music at all by
Woldemar Bargiel is a major surprise nowadays: he is as obscure as Bruckner,
Tchaikovsky and Schubert are well-known. Bargiel (1828-1897) was Clara
Schumann’s half-brother and, in his time, a composer thought of very highly and
a major force in the Brahms “pure music” camp that stood in opposition to the
more-forward-looking Liszt/Wagner group. Toccata Classics has embarked on a
fascinating project to release all of Bargiel’s orchestral music, and the first
CD in the series shows quite clearly what is to come, both for better and for
worse. Bargiel wrote only one symphony, in 1864, and it is a thoroughly
Beethovenian work, filled with drive and intensity that are quite apt for the
mid-Romantic era – but lacking even the modifications of symphonic form and the
extended wind writing that make Schubert’s early symphonies so attractive.
There is a Sturm und Drang quality to
the music, a driving spirit that pulls listeners along effectively – but like
the symphonies of Spohr, who was also a hugely popular composer at this time,
Bargiel’s is more of a repetition of techniques and approaches of the past than
it is a stride of any sort into the future. It is very well-made indeed, but
not original enough to seem like a long-lost work of high stature. The three
concert overtures with which it is paired, though, have considerable interest. Overture to a Tragedy dates to 1856, Overture to Prometheus was written in
1852 and revised in 1854 and 1859, and Overture
to Medea is from about 1861. These are essentially miniature tone poems, along the lines of Beethoven’s Leonore Overture No. 3, but they
encapsulate feelings rather than the plot of a specific opera or story. They
sound again and again like Schumann’s Manfred
Overture (1852), and at the same time they look ahead to Brahms’ Tragic Overture (1880). The best of the
overtures is Overture to Medea, which
is pervaded by a sense of tragedy and features abrupt dynamic changes and a
restless main theme that seem to reflect the sorceress’ unsettled state of
mind. The other overtures have more than a few moments of effectiveness as
well, and the Siberian Symphony Orchestra under Dmitry Vasilyev plays them all
with strength, intensity and a high level of involvement. It may turn out that
Bargiel was more inspired when writing shorter works than when undertaking a
piece of symphonic length. Later releases in this series will show whether that
is true – and listeners curious about the lesser lights of Romanticism will
await them with considerable interest.
It is easy to tell,
nevertheless, why Bargiel and other once-famous composers fell into obscurity
over time. A comparison of Bargiel’s overtures with those by Mendelssohn on a
new Brilliant Classics release provides an object lesson. While there is a
sense that Bargiel is going through the motions of creating varying levels of
drama in his overtures, the ones by
Mendelssohn show something quite different: a composer devotedly exploring
literary and experiential circumstances and then doing his best to reflect
their emotional impact in music. None of these Mendelssohn overtures is straightforward
tone painting: there is no attempt to create a precise musical version of
material from real life (such as a journey to Fingal’s Cave) or literature
(such as Goethe’s two short poems about sea voyages in the age before steam
power). Instead, what Mendelssohn does is extract the essence of the feelings
generated by travel, literature or myth and put that essence into the music.
The result is that his overtures help listeners share in Mendelssohn’s own
feelings and experiences in a way that Bargiel’s well-made ones never do – the
Bargiel works have a level of distancing that their fine structure cannot
conceal, while the Mendelssohn overtures seem to grow organically, as if their
form is largely determined and shaped by the composer’s experiences. The sole
exception here is the “Trumpet” overture, so called because of its trumpet
flourishes – but this is a very early work, and while Mendelssohn at age 16
(when he created it) was already an accomplished composer, he had not yet
attained the emotional maturity that gives the other overtures here their
impact: he was just 17½ when he created the superb Midsummer Night’s Dream overture, but had clearly grown
considerably by that time. Kurt Masur and Mendelssohn’s own orchestra, the
Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, do a superior job with the four overtures they
perform here in a 1974 analog recording, and Walter Weller and the Royal
Scottish National Orchestra are also quite fine in Ruy Blas, an overture to a Victor Hugo drama that Mendelssohn found
repugnant but that still inspired him to create a tense, urgent work wholly in
keeping with the impact of the play. The two-CD set also includes virtually all
the music for A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
a perfectly realized accompaniment to Shakespeare’s play whose vivacity and
lilt seem to emerge naturally in every performance, including this one. Aside
from the music accompanying melodramas (spoken sections with music in the
background), this digital recording from 1992 is complete, including the vocal
elements, which are very nicely sung by soprano Alison Hagley, mezzo-soprano
Louise Winter, and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra Junior Chorus. The
songs are given in English, which Mendelssohn learned after writing this music
– the original settings were in German, but Mendelssohn’s music is so well
constructed that the vocals work in either language. In that way as in many
others, Mendelssohn shows himself as a composer of the highest stature, not
only in his own time but all the way up to ours.
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