Josef Suk: Complete Works for
String Quartet; Piano Quartet. Minguet Quartett (Ulrich Isfort and Annette
Reisinger, violins; Aroa Sorin, viola; Matthias Diener, cello); Matthias
Kirschnereit, piano. CPO. $33.99 (2 CDs).
Federico Moreno Torroba: Guitar
Concertos, Volume 1—Concierto en Flamenco (1962); Diálogos entre guitarra y
orquesta (1977); Aires de La Mancha (1966); Suite castellana (c. 1920).
Pepe Romero and Vicente Coves, guitars; Málaga Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Manuel Coves. Naxos.
$9.99.
Bach: Cantatas, Volume 1—BWV 182,
81 and 129. Chorus and Orchestra of J.S. Bach-Stiftung conducted by Rudolf
Lutz. J.S. Bach-Stiftung. $29.99.
Surveys of the complete
works of composers, or of their complete music for particular instruments, are
becoming increasingly common – and have proved very worthwhile for
understanding how a composer developed, from what roots and into what branches
and what sort of flowering over time. These surveys are not necessarily of interest
to all listeners, though, since they inevitably contain works of varying importance
and quality: even recordings of, say, the complete symphonies of Mozart or
Haydn will showcase works of lesser inspiration alongside those of undoubted
brilliance. Still, for understanding a well-known composer or being introduced
to a less-known one, a “complete” recording of one sort or another can be most
welcome. This is especially true when the performances are as fine as are those
in all these new releases. The Minguet Quartet is simply wonderful in its
recording of the quartet music of Josef Suk (1874-1935), who is generally
remembered more as a violinist and for his relationship with Dvořák and Brahms than for his
compositions. It turns out that Suk progressed significantly in his musical
conceptions over time, starting out in a typical late-Romantic idiom but
eventually producing a quartet so modern in its musical language that it caused
something of a furor in Berlin in 1912 – earning the composer comparisons, not
by any means always complimentary, to Schoenberg. Suk had a habit of revising
and reconsidering his earlier works in light of his later interests, a fact
that sometimes resulted in rather odd hybrids. His String Quartet No. 1 in B-flat, op. 11, for example, dates to 1896,
and it is well-made and lies well on the instruments, featuring a finale with a
recurring three-note motto that sounds like nothing less than Shostakovich. But
some two decades later, Suk decided this finale did not work, so he created a
new one in which – among other things – the motto becomes more prominent, the
overall structure becomes far more dissonant, and the movement’s length is 50%
longer. This new movement, presented here as Quartet movement in B-flat, really does not fit the quartet at all,
but it is fascinating evidence of Suk’s later thinking about the quartet
medium. That thinking is even more in evidence in the notorious String Quartet No. 2, op. 31, which has
no specific home key and does indeed sound like something out of Schoenberg
even though it does not adhere rigidly to twelve-tone or any other specific
systemic structural device. It certainly fits with the time in which it was
written: Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring
was first performed in 1913, the year after the première of Suk’s quartet. The remaining works on this very
well-recorded CPO release may be of lesser importance, but they have charms of
their own. The early Piano Quintet in G
minor, op. 8 lies firmly within late Romanticism, being fleet and pleasant
and thoroughly enjoyable to hear, with the piano generally subsumed within the
totality of the ensemble but asserting itself at a variety of appropriate
places – especially in the rollicking Scherzo,
whose opening would not be out of place in a work by Saint-Saëns. The other four pieces here are
short and not especially significant, but are included for the sake of the
completeness for which this release is designed. They are a Menuet in G, a warmly affecting Ballade in D minor, a brief Barkarole in D minor, and the thoughtful
Meditace na Starocesky Choral, Op. 35a
(“Meditation on the old Bohemian Hymn ‘St. Wenceslas’”). All are played with
assured warmth and a fine understanding of Suk’s place in Czech music and the
rising Czech national consciousness during his lifetime – the result being a
release that provides valuable insight into some fine music by a neglected
composer.
Also important for
nationalistic reasons and also comparatively little-known outside his native
land, Federico Moreno Torroba (1891-1982) was as important for his use and
understanding of Spanish folk music in the context of classical composition as
was Ástor Piazzolla for his adaptation of the Argentine tango to
the classical milieu. The first of three planned Naxos CDs that will collectively
include all of Torroba’s guitar concertos offers an exceptionally well-played
combination of concerto music with works written for guitar solo. Each of the
two guitarists plays one work of each type. Pepe Romero, world-renowned for his
flamenco performances, brings forth all the color, virtuosity and drama of
Torroba’s Concierto en Flamenco and
is also heard in a suite of music focusing on the central Spanish region best
known for the fictional Don Quixote, Aires
de La Mancha. This set of five short movements mixes dances with musical
visions of the area’s geography, and Romero plays it with assurance, warmth and
a strong feeling for local color. The similarly evocative, much earlier
three-movement solo-guitar Suite
castellana, which includes the Danza
that was Torroba’s first-ever guitar composition, also gets a sure-handed and understanding
reading, in this case from Vicente Coves. And Coves shows himself a very fine
classical soloist in the fascinating Diálogos
entre guitarra y orquesta, which plays off the guitar against harp and
celesta as well as the usual orchestral instruments, producing an extended
concerto-like work that is playful, colorful, highly evocative of Spain and its
folk music, and altogether winning. The Málaga Philharmonic Orchestra under Manuel Coves provides very
fine support in the two concertos. Listeners unacquainted with Torroba’s music
will find this disc a first-rate introduction to it.
The music of Bach, unlike
that of Suk and Torroba, is exceedingly well-known, and is also exceedingly
extensive: recordings of Bach’s complete works range from 155 to 172 CDs. The
Bach cantatas alone take up more than 50 discs – and have been recorded as a
cycle several times. This has not stopped new groups from producing new versions
of the music, however, nor has it interfered with the creation of entirely new
recording labels devoted to Bach’s music. J.S. Bach-Stiftung, founded in 2011,
is one such. Based in Switzerland, it is a subsidiary of the J.S. Bach
Foundation and is engaged in a 25-year project to release live recordings of
Bach’s complete vocal music, using period instruments and authentic (which is
to say small) vocal forces. On the basis of the three works on the label’s
first CD of Bach cantatas, this will be a top-notch series of releases. The
sound is warm and complements the intimately scaled performances beautifully.
The singing and playing are historically informed and manage to be “correct”
without sounding at all stilted: there is genuine involvement of the performers
in the music. There does not seem to be any particular rationale for the order
of the cantatas presented, indicating that these releases are really targeting
listeners who want the cantatas as a complete set without regard to chronology
or the specific religious occasions for which the works were created. Thus, BWV
182, Himmelskönig, sei willkommen,
was written for Palm Sunday; BWV 81 – Jesus
schläft, was soll ich hoffen? – is for the fourth Sunday after
Epiphany; and BWV 129, Gelobet sei der
Herr, mein Gott, is for the first Sunday after Pentecost. All are sung and
played here with solemnity and liturgical understanding, but without
heavy-handedness; the organ parts are especially noteworthy, coming through
clearly in the finely managed sonic landscape and within the small instrumental
forces. Not all listeners will be willing to wait years for the full set of
releases from J.S. Bach-Stiftung, but those who have wanted to build a
collection of the Bach cantatas gradually will find this project highly attractive
and a worthwhile alternative to existing recordings of the full set of these works,
which were so very central to Bach’s life and his music.
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