Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2.
Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt conducted by Howard Griffiths.
Klanglogo. $18.99.
Tchaikovsky: Serenade for
Strings; Elegie in G; Josef Suk: Serenade for Strings; Meditation on the Old
Czech Chorale “St. Wenceslas.” Dvořák
Chamber Orchestra conducted by Kypros Markou. Fleur de Son. $18.99.
Nielsen: Maskarade. Stephen
Milling, Johan Reuter, Niels Jørgen
Riis, Stig Fogh Andersen, Dénise
Beck, Anne Margrethe Dahl, Ditte Højgaard
Andersen, Christian Damsgaard; Danish National Choir and Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Michael Schønwandt.
Dacapo. $32.99 (2 SACDs).
Brahms was a composer who
tended to think in pairs, and this is nowhere more evident than in his first
two symphonies: the First, which took him so long to complete as he
contemplated Beethoven ever-striding behind him, is lofty and serious and
intense throughout; the Second, finished quite soon after No. 1, is altogether
more lyrical, more relaxed and even brighter in contrast than a comparison of
the two works’ keys (C minor and D major) would indicate. The symphonies’
contrasts come through with unusual clarity in new performances by the
Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt under Howard Griffiths on the Klanglogo
label, largely because Griffiths takes parts of the works at faster-than-usual
tempos and because he incorporates into his readings a variety of notations by
conductor Fritz Steinbach (1855-1916), considered a preeminent interpreter of
Brahms during the composer’s lifetime (Brahms is known to have attended a music
festival organized by Steinbach). Some of the balances and tempo variations in
Griffiths’ performances come directly from Steinbach’s notes on the symphonies,
and while most of these are matters of degree rather than revelatory elements,
they are enough to emphasize and contrast to a greater extent than usual the
dark seriousness of the First with the warmth of the Second. The orchestra
performs here with the sort of assured skill of an ensemble whose history dates
back before Brahms (to 1842) and whose relationship with Griffiths, its
principal conductor and musical director, is a tightly knit one of mutual
respect and understanding. Indeed, there is a sense of intuitive balance and
anticipatory sectional melding in these performances that makes them seem far
fresher than Brahms’ well-known music often does. There is also a lighter-than-usual
touch to some of the balance here – the brass, for example, does not overwhelm
the other sections but blends into them – and the results are performances that
combine a flavor of authenticity, from incorporating Steinbach’s ideas, with
up-to-date but historically informed handling of the material. The one poor
choice made here is to skip the repeat of the exposition in the first movement
of Symphony No. 2. This may have actually been a producer’s determination
rather than Griffiths’, since it allows the symphonies to fit on a single disc,
which even without the repeat runs more than 80 minutes – as long as a CD can.
Nevertheless, musically this is an unfortunate decision that, however, does not
vitiate the overall beauty and solidity of the performance.
Unlike Brahms’ music,
Tchaikovsky’s tends to the morose most of the time – but there are exceptions, a
notable one being the Serenade for
Strings that is one of his sunniest scores. Written in the bright key of C,
it contains plenty of elements that are integral to Tchaikovsky’s music: a
second-movement waltz, a slow movement marked Elegie (whose tempo indication of Larghetto elegiaco emphasizes the point), and a spirited finale
based on a Russian theme. Other upbeat Tchaikovsky works, including Capriccio Italien, some of the ballet
music and Symphony No. 2, have some characteristics in common with Serenade for Strings, but the serenade
possesses an overall lightness of feeling that goes beautifully with its modest
orchestration and the overall positive emotions it evokes. The fine, light and
elegant performance by the Dvořák
Chamber Orchestra under Kypros Markou, on the Fleur de Son label, is well
complemented by the ensemble’s reading of a more-typical if less-known
Tchaikovsky work, Elegie. This
reaches its G major conclusion only after a setup involving a foreboding minor-key
introduction and a sense of urgency that seems at odds with the piece’s title
(it was originally called A Grateful
Greeting and was written for the golden jubilee of actor/playwright Ivan
Samarin, whom Tchaikovsky knew at the Moscow Conservatory). Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings is often offered on
CD along with Dvořák’s; but
Markou takes a more interesting approach (despite his ensemble’s name) by
pairing the Tchaikovsky with the early Serenade
for Strings by Josef Suk, written when the composer was only 18. Like
Tchaikovsky’s, this serenade is a bright work, in fact written after Dvořák specifically suggested that Suk –
who was prone to melancholy and favored minor keys – write something “joyful.” The
work is pleasant and charming rather than actually bright, and its longest
movement, the Adagio, tugs at the
heart. But as a whole it is warm and effective music, if not especially deep.
It is interestingly paired in this recording with Suk’s Meditation on the Old Czech Chorale “St. Wenceslas,” composed to
counterbalance Austrian nationalism during World War I and becoming, after
Czechoslovakia gained independence in 1918, a significant piece of Czech nationalism. An effective chorale
elaboration, it is a stirring work whose evocation of the patron saint of the
Czech people helps explain its continued popularity.
The popularity of Nielsen’s Maskarade as evocative of the Danish
national spirit has been integral to the work’s success ever since the opera’s
debut in 1906. Maskarade is based
loosely on a comedy by Ludvig Holberg – the same Holberg whose work underlies
Grieg’s Holberg Suite – as altered
and interpreted by Vilhelm Andersen. The libretto was originally considered by
some to be disrespectful of the famed dramatist’s memory, but Nielsen’s music
won just about everyone over from the work’s first performance. Essentially a
serious composer, and one whose six symphonies are astonishingly different from
each other, Nielsen in Maskarade
produced a bubbling and frothy work that nevertheless seems to speak directly
to and of the Danish character. The opera has become increasingly popular
internationally, too, aided by the simplicity of its slight plot: young people
have fun at masquerades and find true love there, despite parental disapproval.
The new performance on Dacapo is a very fine one, managed by Michael Schønwandt with a sure hand and
excellent feel for pacing, and featuring fine singing by soloists and the
Danish National Choir – plus idiomatic, thoroughly engaging playing by the
Danish National Symphony Orchestra. A decade ago, Dacapo re-released on SACD the
classic 1977 performance of Maskarade
conducted by John Frandsen, and that was a reading to revel in. But Schønwandt’s does not take a back seat
to it, and in some ways – notably the original rather than remastered SACD
sound – it is even better. Maskarade
is a thorough delight from the first bars of its bubbling overture to the final
unmasking of all the characters and the happy uniting of young lovers Leander
(Niels Jørgen Riis) and Leonora
(Dénise Beck). Like Frandsen,
Schønwandt wisely uses the
entire opera as Nielsen originally conceived it, with the third act being the
longest. Nielsen came to believe that the act needed significant cutting and
perhaps even combining with Act II. But he never made the combination and
couldn’t quite figure out what to cut – he kept removing pieces, then adding
them back. The result here is a third act that rambles somewhat (the tightly
knit first act is the best of the three); but there is so much joyous music and
so much fun here that even the meandering is enjoyable. Making the whole
production even better is Dacapo’s inclusion of the complete libretto in Danish
and English – bravo, bravo, bravo! Anyone regarding Nielsen as exclusively a
serious Danish composer really ought to hear this Maskarade: it is as Danish as can be, yes, but also as warm,
free-spirited and filled with joy.
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