Schumann: Dichterliebe; Schubert:
Songs—Du bist die Ruh; Die Forelle; Frühlingsglaube; Gretchen am Spinnrade;
Nacht und Träume; Beethoven: Adelaide. Andrew Parker, oboe; Alan
Huckleberry, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Mussorgsky: Pictures at an
Exhibition; Night on the Bare Mountain; Scriabin: Piano Sonata No. 3; Etude in
C-sharp minor, Op. 2, No. 1; Prelude for left hand alone, Op. 9, No. 1.
Alessio Bax, piano. Signum Classics. $17.99.
Bartók: 14 Bagatelles; Two
Romanian Dances; 15 Hungarian Peasant Songs; Improvisations on Hungarian
Peasant Songs; Six Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm from “Mikrokosmos.” Terry
Eder, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
There are several specific
classical forms in which works sound like songs and may even be overtly
songlike, but do not include words. Mendelssohn’s Songs without Words, written from 1829 to 1845 and presented in six
volumes, are well-known and have been often imitated; here the title indicates
a songlike approach to music that never had a vocal element but sounds as if it
could, perhaps even should, have one. Then there is the concept of vocalise,
presented (for example) in Rachmaninoff’s Op. 34, No. 14, and in Nielsen’s
Symphony No. 3, in which a singer is present but his and/or her voice is
treated entirely as an instrument, producing sounds but no words – narrative is
absent, but this is very clearly singing. A new MSR Classics release featuring
oboist Andrew Parker offers wordless singing of a different sort, through
transcriptions for oboe and piano of music originally intended to be sung.
Whether the oboe is the instrument that best approximates the human voice is a
matter of opinion – arguments could be made for the clarinet, cello, even
French horn – but attempting to duplicate vocal sounds through the oboe is not
the point here. Instead, Parker and pianist Alan Huckleberry offer thoughtful,
emotionally involving interpretations of works whose storytelling was always
uppermost in their composers’ minds but that communicate effectively even in
the absence of words. Or at least the pieces are effective in this form for
listeners who know the originals. A point worth repeating is one famously made
by Leonard Bernstein, to the effect that music does not mean anything – a statement he backed up amusingly in his Young
People’s Concerts by playing some of Richard Strauss’ Don Quixote and telling the audience that it was all about
Superman, which indeed made as much sense as the work’s original program. In an
analogous vein, Schumann’s Dichterliebe,
a 16-song cycle with specific material to communicate from a longer set of
poems by Heinrich Heine, does not tell any specific story as heard here. Yet lack
of knowledge of the narrative material does nothing to diminish the fine
quality of Parker’s and Huckleberry’s playing and nothing to reduce the
emotional involvement to which they invite listeners – but Dichterliebe does not mean
anything in this form; it is simply a collection of brief oboe-and-piano pieces
that collectively make for pleasant but not exceptionally telling listening.
Similarly, Beethoven’s 1795 proto-Romantic song Adelaide loses something in its transformation to an oboe-and-piano
piece: its oddly ecstatic final stanza, in which the poet exults over his
coming death and transfiguration, makes an effective capstone for the work as
heard on oboe and piano, but, again, it does not mean anything: it is simply a march that caps earlier, more dreamy
material. It is the five well-known Schubert songs that come across best as oboe-and-piano
works, perhaps because Schubert himself led the way from song to instrumental
work by building the famous “Trout” quintet around Die Forelle. Listeners who know this original song or its quartet
version will find the Parker-Huckleberry transcription quite appealing, and
indeed, all of these Schubert songs sing forth here with delicacy, lyricism and
a kind of compelling purity. They no longer say what Schubert intended them to
say, it is true, but they do speak out pleasantly and emotionally.
Singing was much on Scriabin’s mind in
regard to his Piano Sonata No. 3. After initially calling this sonata “Gothic,”
he later rethought what he was trying to communicate and declared it to
represent “States of the Soul.” The soul wants to sing and flourish, he wrote
of the second movement, and there is a song of triumph prominent in the fourth
and final movement. Indeed, there are songful elements throughout this work, as
well as in the Etude and Prelude that accompany it on a new Signum Classics CD
featuring pianist Alessio Bax. The poetry and intricate intensity of the
Scriabin sonata come through forcefully in Bax’s reading, and although the work
ends in defeat, Bax effectively communicates Scriabin’s notion that the failure
is only temporary, even if the form of eventual victory is not apparent within
the sonata itself. The turbulent colors of Scriabin are well-balanced here by
the elegant miniatures of Mussorgsky’s Pictures
at an Exhibition, which Bax handles less as a virtuoso showpiece than as a
vivid visit to an artist’s world – or rather two artists’ worlds, those of
Mussorgsky and of Viktor Hartmann. The contrasts between the lighter, piquant
pictures and the darker, dour ones are brought forth particularly well here,
with the final Great Gate of Kiev a
potent capstone for the work. Also on this CD is Night on the Bare Mountain, which Bax himself has here edited and
arranged. On the piano, this orchestral showpiece inevitably loses some of the
brilliant characterization that Mussorgsky achieved through instrumentation and
Rimsky-Korsakov (in the best-known version) subsequently polished and
moderated. But the anarchic pleasures of the earlier parts of the work come
through especially well under Bax’s hands, and the tone poem as a whole retains
a kind of craggy beauty.
In the case of the songs
underlying piano works by Bartók
on a new CD from MSR Classics, the original sung texts are absent by design: the
songs are building blocks used by the composer as some of his studies,
elaborations and explorations of folk music. What Terry Eder plays here is an
entire disc of miniatures: the CD runs 78 minutes and includes 45 tracks. No
individual song or element stands out from the others or is intended to: Bartók’s aim in all the works heard here
was to express himself through folk music while at the same time utilizing the
generally simple tunes and harmonies of folk material to produce works of
greater emotional compass and impact than folk tunes themselves possess. Thus,
the 15 Hungarian Peasant Songs and Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs
take off from simple material and sometimes present it more-or-less
straightforwardly while at other times offering it in expanded, more-complex
form. The songs that form the basis of these works are neither more nor less
foundational to Bartók’s
construction of the pieces than the dances that underlie Two Romanian Dances and Six
Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm. The danceable elements remain present in these
works, although not always on the surface, but the composer’s purpose here is
the creation and use of a compositional method focusing on folk elements
without being fully beholden to them. This makes the works sound academic, however,
and that is not at all how they sound in Eder’s performances, which are light
and lithe when they should be and strongly accented and emphasized when that is
the appropriate approach. The most interesting piece on the CD is 14 Bagatelles, which shows a
transitional stage in Bartók’s
compositions as he sought to use more Eastern European folk music in his works
and also incorporated some of the influences of Debussy. There is a distinctly
modern sound here, even though 14
Bagatelles is early Bartók
(Op. 6, 1908). Experimental harmonic passages are frequent throughout these
character pieces, and Eder does a fine job of exploring the modern-sounding
elements while also staying true to the essentially folklike material on which
Bartók built this work.
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