Saint-Saëns: Symphony No. 3,
“Organ”; Symphony in A; Le rouet d’Omphale. Carl Adam Landström, organ; Malmö Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Marc Soustrot. Naxos. $12.99.
Prokofiev: Symphony No. 3;
Scythian Suite; Autumn—Symphonic Sketch. São Paulo Symphony Orchestra conducted by Marin Alsop. Naxos.
$12.99.
Ravel: Daphnis et Chloé;
Pavane pour une infante défunte. Netherlands Radio Choir and Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra conducted
by Yannick Nézet-Séguin. BIS. $21.99 (SACD).
Shostakovich: Symphony No. 9; Violin Concerto No. 1. Leonidas Kavakos, violin; Mariinsky
Orchestra conducted by Valery Gergiev. Mariinsky. $18.99 (SACD).
Brahms: Symphony No. 1; Copland: Fanfare for the Common Man; Bernstein:
Chichester Psalms; Verdi: Messa da Requiem—Sanctus; Górecki: Totus Tuus;
Bogurodzica—Ancient Polish Marian Hymn. Kraków Philharmonic Choir, Choral Arts Society of Washington and
Orchestra of St. Luke’s conducted by Sir Gilbert Levine. Delos. $16.99 (2 CDs).
Some years ago, before
Tchaikovsky’s oeuvre was as
thoroughly explored as it is now, it used to be remarked whimsically that he
composed three symphonies: Nos. 4, 5 and 6. That may no longer be said of
Tchaikovsky, but something similar is still the case with Saint-Saëns, who is generally known to have
written one symphony: his Third. And to confuse matters further, Saint-Saëns’ Symphony No. 3 is actually his
No. 5. Marc Soustrot and the Malmö
Symphony Orchestra, having already recorded the first two numbered symphonies
(yes, Nos. 1 and 2) for Naxos, have now released the famous “Organ” symphony
(which, to add to the confusion, should really be called the organ-and-piano
symphony, since it includes both those instruments). And they have paired it
with Saint-Saëns’ very first,
unnumbered symphony, an A major work that he wrote around 1850, when he was 15
years old. Saint-Saëns, like
Mozart and Mendelssohn, was an extraordinary prodigy, and it is therefore no
surprise that this early symphony shows maturity and a command of orchestration
that would be the envy of some far older composers. It is also no surprise that
the work has many derivative elements – including ones that derive from Mozart
and Mendelssohn. Indeed, the famous contrapuntal theme from the finale of
Mozart’s Symphony No. 41 is quoted directly several times (the theme was
well-known in Mozart’s time and before: Haydn used it in his Symphony No. 13). The
Symphony in A is a solid, well-paced work, with a particularly interestingly
scored Scherzo: solo flute and oboe with strings. It is, of course, strikingly
different from the “Organ” symphony, whose grandeur and tightly knit form owe
much to Liszt, to whose memory it is dedicated. Soustrot does a very fine job
of giving both these works their due, neither overplaying them nor
over-emphasizing their differences – he lets them speak for themselves, which
they do quite eloquently, if in somewhat different symphonic languages. Carl
Adam Landström’s organ playing
has all the elegance and drama that the Symphony No. 3 requires, and the
performance as a whole is one that builds inexorably to its organ-led climax
after taking listeners through a series of elegantly fashioned, very
well-orchestrated episodes. The two symphonies on this CD are well complemented
by Saint-Saëns’ first symphonic
poem – in effect, another tribute to Liszt, whose works in the form Saint-Saëns admired. This is Le rouet d’Omphale, based on the legend
of Hercules being forced to serve Queen Omphale for three years while dressed
as a woman – including spending his time with the queen’s maidens using the rouet, a spinning wheel. Once well-known
as the theme of the popular radio serial The
Shadow, this symphonic poem is less often heard today, but it remains a
piece of effectively atmospheric tone painting. With this release, Soustrot and
the Malmö Symphony Orchestra
have recorded all of Saint-Saëns’
symphonies except Urbs Roma of 1856
(written three years after Symphony No. 1 and not to be confused with Bizet’s
symphony that is also called Roma).
Hopefully that work is forthcoming.
Another ongoing Naxos series
is offering the Prokofiev symphonies with the São Paulo Symphony Orchestra conducted by Marin Alsop. The latest
release is actually a mixture of symphony and symphonic poem – like the new
Soustrot/Saint-Saëns disc – and
also has strong elements of ballet and opera. The symphony here, No. 3 (1928),
is itself the operatic element: Prokofiev assembled it by reworking material
from his opera The Fiery Angel, which
was not performed as a complete opera in his lifetime. The opera, and the
symphony derived from it, are highly dramatic, and Alsop is fully at home with
the material, pulling out all the stops to make the symphony as intense as can
be. Alsop is a somewhat mercurial conductor, frequently seeming blasé about the
standard repertoire and producing matter-of-fact, even dull or misguided performances
of it. But when she finds a work challenging, as is clearly the case here, she
extracts excellent playing from an orchestra and shows genuine insight into the
music. The São Paulo Symphony
Orchestra is notably strong in the lower strings – the cello section is
excellent – and handles percussion particularly well. Woodwinds are not quite
as high-quality, and the brass can be a bit harsh, but the musicians give their
all to this music, and the result is involving and even exhilarating. Actually,
the exhilaration is less in the symphony than in the balletic Scythian Suite of 1914-15, which has
some of the exoticism of Stravinsky’s only slightly earlier The Rite of Spring. The central, far
from calm section of the third movement, Night,
is a highlight here, and Dance of the
Spirits of Darkness is appropriately malevolent. The symphony and suite are
nicely balanced by the short and gentle symphonic poem Autumn, which Prokofiev called a “symphonic sketch” and revised
twice after initially composing it in 1910. In all this music, Alsop seems
comfortable with Prokofiev’s varied moods and his sometimes abrupt shifts from
one to the next; and the orchestra gives her playing that, if it lacks the
sumptuousness that would be expected from a Russian ensemble, is nevertheless
very fine.
A new BIS recording of
Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé is focused entirely on ballet, of course,
although it is worth noting that the composer called this work – his longest –
a “choreographic symphony.” In three parts running a total of almost an hour, Daphnis et Chloé has all the rhythmic, dynamic and
contrasting elements of a symphony – a choral symphony, in fact, since it calls
for a mixed chorus. The Netherlands Radio Choir and Rotterdam Philharmonic
Orchestra under Yannick Nézet-Séguin handle the music with all the color and
verve it requires, and Nézet-Séguin is particularly well attuned to the fact
that this music was written to be danced: he has a fine sense of rhythm and of
the contrasts among the various solo and ensemble dances. Many of Nézet-Séguin’s
tempos are on the brisk side, but not unduly so, and he does allow the slower
and more-lyrical dances plenty of time to unfold. The SACD sound is first-rate
and helps communicate the care of Ravel’s orchestration, whose detailing in
telling the story is impressive. The disc is rounded out with a warm and
touching reading of Pavane pour une
infante défunte, featuring especially elegant horn playing by Martin van de
Merwe. The intersection of ballet and symphony is as interesting here as it is,
in a very different way, on the Alsop/Prokofiev CD.
The limitations of Alsop’s basically fine
orchestra in Russian repertoire are clear immediately when one listens to the
Mariinsky Orchestra under Valery Gergiev perform Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 9
and Violin Concerto on the Mariinsky’s own label. This is an absolutely superb,
virtually picture-perfect performance of a very strange symphony, one that went
against all expectations for a “ninth” (dating to the time of Beethoven and including
Bruckner’s and Mahler’s) as well as all anticipated triumphalism for an
end-of-war symphony. Even today, 70 years after World War II, the grotesqueries
of this symphony are enough to make a listener sit up and take notice. And Gergiev – who, like Alsop, can be an uneven
conductor, but who is very much in his element here – gets every bizarre
element of the score right, from rhythmic changes to percussive explosions to
recollections of the “invasion” theme from Symphony No. 7 to sarcasm so
deep-seated and cutting that it practically overflows. The Mariinsky Orchestra
is so comfortable with this music that it never seems to be straining to
produce exactly the right sound – instead, the players can focus wholly on
exigencies of interpretative detail, those niceties of balance and attack that
make all the difference between a well-executed reading and a brilliant one
like this. The SACD sound helps a great deal, too, pinpointing every element of
Shostakovich’s lucid orchestration – but even when simply played on CD
equipment, the performance brings out fine detail to an extraordinary degree.
The Violin Concerto is almost as good. Gergiev is not fully comfortable taking
a back seat to anyone, including Leonidas Kavakos, so there is an occasional
feeling of competitiveness between soloist and orchestra in the concerto. But
that is actually not wholly out of place in this impassioned, fervent work, in
which both solo violin and orchestra seem to strive mightily from start to
finish – or at least until the very extended cadenza (practically a movement in
itself), after which the concluding Burlesque
comes across as an almost-desperate release of tightly wound tension. Kavakos
takes the full measure of the music, and Gergiev’s accompaniment, even when it
seems about to subsume the solo violin within the ensemble, is sensitive to
Shostakovich’s intentions and strongly allied with the composer’s complex and
sometimes self-contradictory worldview.
Both Shostakovich and Prokofiev learned
first-hand that politics and music make uneasy bedfellows at best, and both
suffered at the hands of political authorities determined to bend musical
creativity to their will. Yet the temptation to use music for sociopolitical
ends persists, and there is an underlying assumption that no one will mind its
use for avowedly good purposes. And what is better than peace? Hence a new Delos recording called A Celebration of Peace through Music, in
which Sir Gilbert Levine conducts one
great symphony and five other works with the aim of – well, of celebrating and
calling for peace, although the connection with this particular music is by no
means clear. Really, Brahms’ Symphony No. 1 is no “peace symphony,” for all
that the storms that open the finale are swept away through a mighty thunderclap
that could just as well come from the Norse god Thor as from any peace-loving
deity. Verdi’s Requiem is, after all,
a mass for the dead, for all the beauty of its out-of-context Sanctus movement. Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms does end with a hope for
“brethren to dwell together in unity,” but it is scarcely a simple or
simplistic plea for peace. Bogurodzica,
a Polish hymn that may date back as far as the 10th century, is
indeed a Marian hymn, calling on Jesus’ mother, but it has also been sung before
and during a variety of battles. Similarly, Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man and Górecki’s Totus Tuus have agendas (if that is even the right word) that
extend beyond dona nobis pacem
(actually, the absence of an Agnus dei
from this live recording is a touch puzzling). All the performances here are
certainly heartfelt, and there is no reason to doubt the sincerity of the
concert organizers or the musicians participating in the event. But this two-CD
set is nevertheless a (+++) recording, because while the playing and
interpretations are fine, nothing here is particularly revelatory as music, and the overarching “peace”
agenda detracts from purely musical emotional communication rather than
enhancing or expanding it.
Thank you InfoDad for your review. For those, like the author, who are curious about the title, the CD is a live recording of the “A Celebration of Peace Through Music” concert that was given in celebration of the canonizations of Pope John Paul II and Pope John XXIII, in the spirit of Pope Francis and conducted by “The Pope's Maestro”, Sir Gilbert Levine. The concert was broadcast on PBS this Spring and each musical work performed was selected to reflect the spirit of these three great spiritual leaders and their commitment to peace and brotherhood among people of all faiths.
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