Beethoven: Diabelli Variations,
Op. 120; Variations on Diabelli’s Waltz by 50 Composers. Pier Paolo
Vincenzi, piano. Brilliant Classics. $11.99 (2 CDs).
Bach: Orchestral Suites Nos. 1-4.
Virtuosi Saxoniae conducted by Ludwig Güttler.
Brilliant Classics. $7.99.
Brahms: Serenades No. 1, Op. 11,
and No. 2, Op. 16; Academic Festival Overture; Tragic Overture; Variations on a
Theme by Haydn. Dresdner Philharmonie conducted by Heinz Bongartz (Serenades);
London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos (Academic Festival); Berliner Sinfonie-Orchester
conducted by Günter Herbig
(Tragic; Variations). Brilliant Classics. $11.99 (2 CDs).
At its best, the Brilliant
Classics label deserves its name, offering first-class performances, often very
cleverly conceived, showing clearly that a label dedicated to bargain-priced
classical music ($7.99 for single CDs, $11.99 for two-CD sets) need not stint
on repertoire selection or performance quality. The Diabelli-focused release
featuring pianist Pier Paolo Vincenzi is a perfect example of this. Vincenzi
has undertaken unusual repertoire for Brilliant Classics before, admirably
recording all of Wagner’s piano music. Now he has done something even more
interesting: in addition to performing Beethoven’s famed variations on Anton
Diabelli’s trivial waltz theme, Vincenzi has gone back to the original concept
that led Beethoven to create his masterwork. This was Diabelli’s plan to have
51 composers of his time provide one variation apiece – the project aiming to
help unite the disparate peoples of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, demonstrate
the capabilities of the newly evolved and still-developing piano, and (not
merely incidentally) cementing Diabelli’s own relationship with numerous
composers for the sake of future publishing business. So this was what we now
call a marketing tool as well as a musical one, and a very clever idea it
turned out to be (it is intriguing to wonder whether Hummel, who contributed to
Diabelli’s project and later became quite a “musical marketer” himself, picked
up some of his ideas from Diabelli). What we have here from Vincenzi is
therefore a performance of, first, one of the greatest solo works in the piano
literature; and, second, a rendition of a musical curiosity that was very much
of its time (akin in its way to Liszt’s later Hexameron) but that also is of considerable interest to anyone
wondering about the great, near-great and not-so-great composers of Beethoven’s
era. Most of the variations by the 50 composers other than Beethoven are about
one minute long, as is Diabelli’s theme, but there are some surprises, such as
a three-minute Quasi Ouverture by
Joseph Drechsler, a five-and-a-half-minute Capriccio
by A. Emanuel Förster, and a
three-minute Fuga by Archduke Rudolf
of Austria. Hummel’s variation, on the other hand, lasts just 33 seconds and is
the second-shortest of all. Other moderately or highly recognizable names among the
contributors include Carl Czerny, Anselm Hüttenbrenner, Frederic Kalkbrenner, Franz Liszt (a 35-second
piece by a composer then just 11 years old), Ignatz Moscheles, Franz Xaver
Wolfgang Mozart, Johann Peter Pixis, and Franz Schubert. It would be stretching
a point to call any of these brief items important, but their context is
fascinating, the collection provides listeners with a highly unusual sonic
journey to a significant time in musical history, and Vincenzi’s handling of
the huge and tremendously challenging Beethoven work is also absolutely
top-notch. Vincenzi here shows himself just as capable in grand and important
music as in miniatures and trivia – the whole two-CD set, recorded from May to
December of 2014, is a joy to hear.
There is also much joy to be
had in the Brilliant Classics release of a considerably older recording, that
of Bach’s four orchestral suites by Virtuosi Saxoniae under Ludwig Güttler. In addition to releasing new
performances, Brilliant Classics brings back ones recorded in the past, often
in what used to be East Germany: this one was made at the Lukaskirche in
Dresden in 1990, 1991 and 1992, just as the Soviet Union was collapsing. There
was excellent music-making in much of the old Soviet empire, just as in the old
Austro-Hungarian one, and CDs like this one provide a window into what was a
largely closed society while at the same time – and more importantly – offering
21st-century listeners readings that are highly worthy on their own,
independent of the venue where they originated. Güttler (born 1943) is an expert performer on the Baroque trumpet,
piccolo trumpet and corno da caccia, and Virtuosi Saxoniae is one of several
ensembles that he himself founded. The players, members of Staatskapelle
Dresden, are uniformly excellent, and Güttler’s
own skill as both conductor and performer is everywhere evident in this
first-rate recording. Indeed, Güttler
assumes the first-trumpet role in the third and fourth suites, in addition to
that of the ensemble’s leader. The performances here are well-paced, with fast-movement
tempos on the speedy side (leading to more than a few exhilarating moments); yet
slower movements are paced with tremendous sensitivity (the Air from the third suite has never sounded
more affecting). The readings are filled with understanding of Bach’s rhythms
and of the dances on which most movements of the suites are based. The verve
and spirit of the playing are infectious. The oboists in the first suite,
flautist in the second, and trumpeters in the third and fourth are especially
noteworthy for their instrumental control, smoothness of sound, and equal
ability to stand out from the overall ensemble or to blend into it, depending
on what the music calls for. This is by any standards a top-quality performance
of Bach’s suites, and its availability at a bargain price makes the Brilliant
Classics business model seem all the more impressive and attractive.
It does not, however, always
operate at this rarefied level. A newly released two-CD set of Brahms
orchestral music is a perfectly respectable (+++) recording, but that is all –
there are better performances of these pieces, and much better-sounding ones,
readily available. This release is a hodgepodge of analog recordings – the only
digital one is the Academic Festival
Overture, recorded in 1989, when digital technology was still only so-so in
reproducing classical music without unduly squashing the sound. The Tragic Overture was recorded in 1978,
the Haydn Variations in 1979, and the
two serenades all the way back in 1962 – and although their sound is good for
that era, it is not really up to modern standards. The serenade performances do
show the quality of East German music-making at the time they were made, with the
Dresdner Philharmonie playing at a high level throughout and Heinz Bongartz
(1894-1978) bringing expansiveness to the music and, in particular,
considerable warmth to the slow movements. Günter Herbig (born 1931) is similarly effective, and the Berliner
Sinfonie-Orchester similarly impressive, in the Haydn Variations, while the Tragic
Overture here gets considerable heft and a slow tempo that effectively
brings out the unnamed tragedy it represents – although sections in the middle
do drag a bit. The contrasting lightness of the Academic Festival Overture, whose recording is brighter than that
of the other works here, is abundantly clear, and the lighter sound of the
London Symphony Orchestra under Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos fits the music very well indeed. Nevertheless,
in totality, this potpourri of Brahms’ non-symphonic orchestral music is the
sort of release that can be recommended with little hesitation only to
listeners unfamiliar with the repertoire – ones looking for a low-cost entry
point to a selection of works they do not know, so they can decide for
themselves whether to seek out more-recent, more-impressive readings elsewhere.
Brilliant Classics actually performs a welcome service by making recordings
like this one available: people with only a modicum of interest in classical
music, including ones pressed for money (say, college students), will welcome a
two-CD set like this one even though it is not quite at the pinnacle of
performance or sound quality. So even if releases of this type are less than
brilliant, they are very worthy on a musical basis and very much appreciated
for the price at which they make great classical works available.
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