Schumann: Symphonies Nos. 1-4.
Odense Symphony Orchestra conducted by Simon Gaudenz. CPO. $33.99. (2 SACDs).
Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4.
Tonkünstler-Orchester conducted
by Andrés Orozco-Estrada.
Oehms. $39.99 (3 CDs).
Gounod: Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2.
Netherlands Chamber Orchestra conducted by Gordan Nicolić. Tacet. $21.99.
The sheer quality of
European orchestras and of their conductors, including ones not particularly
well-known in North America, sometimes leads to revelatory performances of
works on which it would seem reasonable to assume there is not much new to be
said. Simon Gaudenz is scarcely a household name worldwide, and Denmark’s
Odense Symphony Orchestra is not one that immediately comes to mind when
thinking about top ensembles. But Gaudenz and the orchestra deliver genuinely
exciting and in some respects highly unusual performances of Schumann’s four
symphonies on a new CPO recording. It is not just that the playing is so good –
although it is really good, at the
level listeners have come to expect of top German orchestras. What comes
through here is that Gaudenz appears to have fired up the orchestra to see
Schumann in some new ways, in particular as a composer whose works contain
strong contrasts both within themselves and throughout the four-symphony cycle.
That the four works are different from one another is scarcely a new
observation, but the way Gaudenz shows those differences is highly effective. He
is given to significant tempo changes and contrasts, so that, for example, the
main part of the first movement of the “Spring” symphony practically gallops
along, as does the work’s finale – marked Allegro
animato e grazioso, and here perhaps more animato than grazioso but
all the more exhilarating for that emphasis. Symphony No. 4, the second written
but a work usually heard, as it is here, in a modified, later form that can
easily come across as turgid (there are a lot of instrumental doublings), has a
lightness, almost airiness in Gaudenz’ version. And although its
single-movement structure remains clear, the four sections that make this
essentially a four-movements-in-one work are particularly well contrasted here,
giving the symphony a simultaneous sense of unity and of different feelings from
one portion to the next. Gaudenz does just as well with Nos. 2 and 3. The
Second, whose opening movement has a main theme that is very difficult to play
effectively, actually attains some grandeur in the interpretation here, and
this allows for a very vivid contrast with the Scherzo; and there is a
similarly effective distinction between the third and fourth movements. The
Third strides forward strongly and gains its expansiveness from its
five-movement structure and from Gaudenz’ willingness to let both the slow
movements expand to what feels like their natural size. Fine playing, very fine
sound and more-than-fine musicianship make this Schumann cycle one worth
returning to again and again.
The Brahms cycle by the Tonkünstler-Orchester conducted by Andrés Orozco-Estrada is just as
impressive in its own way. This Austrian ensemble has warmth, elegance,
first-rate sectional balance, and an impressively intuitive way with Brahms.
And Orozco-Estrada, a native of Colombia, has certainly plumbed the composer’s
emotional depths – helped, no doubt, by having been educated in Vienna, but
surely helped as well by what seems to be a finely honed intuitive grasp of
Brahms’ broad sweep and melodic richness. Orozco-Estrada sees these symphonies
as filled with long musical lines and breadth of thought, and he has no problem
allowing them to unfold at stately tempos that do not, however, ever plod or
become draggy. The pacing of the performances required Oehms to release the
cycle on three CDs rather than two: the First and Fourth have their own discs
here, while the Second and Third share one – and barely fit on it. Yet the
timings of the movements, which might lead to an expectation of an overall slow
approach, are misleading: there is no specific place to which a listener can
point and say that Orozco-Estrada is holding the music back or failing to give
it its propulsive due. Rather, the conductor is shaping the symphonies
according to a vision in which the initial presentation of the music decidedly
sets the scene for the remainder of it: the first movements of Nos. 2-4 are
notably longer than any other movements of those works, and although the
massive finale of No. 1 retains its position as the symphony’s climax and is
longer than the opening movement, it is only so by a bit more than a minute. Orozco-Estrada
pulls listeners into all this music with a sense of unfolding drama and grand
scale beyond that found in most Brahms symphonic performances – and in each
symphony, the succeeding movements, after those highly impressive openings,
seem to follow naturally and expand upon the first movements’ arguments. The
result is that each symphony comes across as a fully integrated whole –
something that many performers achieve with the Third but that rarely sounds
this way in the other symphonies. The superior orchestral sound – and the
superior recorded sound as well – help Orozco-Estrada deliver a vision of
Brahms’ symphonies that is first-rate from start to finish.
The symphonic production of
Charles Gounod is far more modest, and occurred in an environment quite
different from that affecting Schumann and Brahms. Schumann’s final symphony,
the revision of his original Second that we know as No. 4, dates to 1851, while
Brahms’ First did not appear until 1876 – although the composer started working
on it in 1855, the same year in which Gounod wrote both of his symphonies. The
French had little interest in symphonies at this time, ceding leadership in the
form to the Germans and focusing instead on opera. It was not until Saint-Saëns’ “Organ” symphony (1886) that a
French symphony again attained the impressive heights of Berlioz’ Symphonie fantastique (1830). So it is
no surprise that Gounod’s works are slighter in scope than those of Schumann
and Brahms. Indeed, they are highly indebted to the Classical era as funneled
through the music of Mendelssohn – with the result that they sound particularly
good when performed by a small ensemble, such as the Netherlands Chamber
Orchestra. Gordan Nicolić, concertmaster of the orchestra as well as
its conductor, gets the fleetness and light elegance of the works’
orchestration exactly right in a new recording for Tacet, and his live
performance of No. 1 zips along from start to finish with considerable élan and
a sure sense of Gounod’s style – in both its original and derivative elements.
In No. 2, a studio recording, Nicolić is a touch more reserved, although he certainly listens to the
composer in the final movement, which Gounod marked Allegro, leggiero assai. Indeed, there is an overall lightness to
both of Gounod’s symphonies – not one indicating a lack of seriousness of
purpose, but one showing that Gounod valued transparency of orchestration and
easy accessibility of musical ideas above heaven-storming intensity and
strongly dramatic thematic development. These symphonies are not the primary
works for which Gounod is known, by any means, but they are an important part
of his production and shed considerable light on his approach to operatic
clarity and accessibility. They also show just how effective the symphonic form
could be even when managed with less tempestuousness and structural erudition
than it received from the Germanic composers in the years after the death of
Beethoven.
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