American Originals: Songs by
Stephen Foster and other works. Cincinnati Pops Orchestra conducted by John
Morris Russell. Fanfare Cincinnati. $16.99.
The Genius of Film Music:
Hollywood Blockbusters 1960s to 1980s. London Philharmonic Orchestra
conducted by John Mauceri. LPO. $17.99 (2 CDs).
Haydn: Symphonies Nos. 31
(“Hornsignal”), 70 and 101 (“The Clock”). Scottish Chamber Orchestra
conducted by Robin Ticciati. Linn Records. $22.99 (SACD).
There is not the slightest
requirement that music be profound in order to be enjoyable – quite the
opposite, in fact. Much enjoyable music is determinedly surface-level and
straightforward, not only in the pop-music world (which is built almost entirely
on superficiality) but also in classical music. After all, no matter how
wonderful the works of Vienna’s Strauss family were, the basic purpose of the
pieces was to be danceable and melodious. So no apology is necessary for the enjoyment
listeners will receive from a new Cincinnati Pops recording of arrangements of
Stephen Foster songs, released on the orchestra’s own label. The 17 tracks here
include Foster’s most-popular, most-loved tunes (even though the songs’ words,
written largely for 19th-century minstrel and blackface shows, have
often been amended in recent times in accordance with modern sensibilities).
There are arrangements of O! Susannah,
Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair, My Old Kentucky Home, Old Folks at Home
(“Swanee River”), Beautiful Dreamer and Camptown
Races. There is also some less-known Foster here, and it is particularly
delightful to hear the less-often-performed music of this first great American
songwriter: Slumber My Darling; Ring,
Ring de Banjo (the third word here given as “the”); Hard Times Come Again No More; and Why No One to Love? The more than 200 songs by Foster (1826-1864)
are honored here in true modern musical-crossover style, with the orchestra
under John Morris Russell joined by Rosanne Cash, Aoife O’Donovan, Joe Henry,
Don Flemons and other performers – and with Foster’s music complemented on this
live recording by spirituals and other works deemed quintessentially American,
which means the disc includes Amazing
Grace, Rolling River: Sketches on Shenandoah, Kumbaya, Aura Lee, Foster’s Folly,
Red River Valley, and The Battle Cry
of Freedom. Warmly and enthusiastically played throughout, this is music
that often tugs at the heartstrings, especially if listeners know the original
lyrics (to My Old Kentucky Home, for
example), but whose poignancy is at the service of a generally upbeat upwelling
of emotion.
The emotions intended to be
conveyed or reinforced by film music (such as warmth, joy, and pathos rather
than tragedy) are in some ways quite similar to those associated with Foster’s works.
In other ways, film scores must be created in the same way as certain great
ballets: the music for Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker,
for example, was constructed according to the needs of the choreography of
Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov, just as film music is developed according to the
needs of the director. The visual elements in both cases come first and are
dominant. Tchaikovsky’s music has long outlasted the ballet’s original staging,
but standalone film music, even by great composers such as Prokofiev and
Shostakovich, has a more checkered history. The reason is that even when film
scores are at their best, they are intended as part of a multimedia experience
– one in which the visual element dominates and drives everything else. Still,
the new London Philharmonic Orchestra recording on the orchestra’s own label
shows just how worthy certain film scores can be – although in all cases,
familiarity with the movie for which the score was written will enhance the
effectiveness of John Mauceri’s well-paced conducting. The nine composers
represented on this two-CD set are among the best-known names in Hollywood
film-music history: Alex North (Cleopatra
Symphony), Nino Rota (The Godfather:
A Symphonic Portrait), Franz Waxman (Taras
Bulba: The Ride of the Cossacks), Bernard Herrman (Psycho: A Narrative for String Orchestra), Bronislaw Kaper (Mutiny on the Bounty), Jerry Goldsmith (Star Trek: The New Enterprise), Ennio
Morricone (Once Upon a Time in America:
Deborah’s Theme), Maurice Jarré
(Lawrence of Arabia: Lawrence and the
Desert), and Alfred Newman (the very brief 20th Century Fox Fanfare). The shorter pieces here are
often the most evocative: Waxman’s and Morricone’s pieces are highly effective
even for listeners unfamiliar with the films. The longer works essentially
compress their movies’ stories, or parts of them, and depend more on listeners’
knowing what the films were about (although there is no question what type of film Herrman, for one, was
writing for). Much recent film music is quite forgettable; some, notably the
John Williams score for the original Star
Wars, deserves to stand with the great film scores, even if not quite at
the level of, say, Prokofiev’s Alexander
Nevsky. But greatness or long-term popularity has never been the primary
point of film music: it is designed to enhance moviegoing, and as this LPO
release shows, can provide pleasant if scarcely soul-stirring experience even
outside the theater.
The original venues for
Haydn’s symphonies were concert halls, whether at the Esterházy palace or in
London for impresario Johann Peter Salomon, and it is worth remembering that
these works’ primary purpose was always entertainment: Haydn managed to advance
the symphony extensively and in very significant ways, but without the
heaven-storming intensity that Beethoven (Haydn’s onetime pupil) brought to the
form in ushering in the Romantic era. Haydn’s works are far from simple but are
invariably pleasant, generally light in scoring if not “light” in the sense of
communicating only on a surface level. A new Linn Records SACD featuring the
Scottish Chamber Orchestra under Robin Ticciati offers an unusual combination
of Haydn symphonies and in so doing highlights just how distinctive Haydn’s
works in this form were. Ticciati is not an especially idiomatic interpreter of
Haydn, but the orchestra plays very well indeed and the enthusiasm of conductor
and musicians is palpable. This is especially so in Symphony No. 31, the
unusually scored “Hornsignal,” which in addition to four horns calls for a solo
flute and pair of oboes and includes solo parts for violin, cello and double
bass. This highly inventive work sparkles here, with the horns if anything a
touch too bright (natural horns fit this music much better); the gentle Adagio, where solo and pizzicato strings
are prominent, comes off especially well. Symphony No. 70 is a rather odd
choice for this disc: written in 1779, 14 years after No. 31, it is rarely
performed and is generally rather conventional for a work of its time. It is
also short – only about 19 minutes – and its longest movement, the Andante, is rather cold. Austere scoring
and contrapuntal structure are this work’s hallmarks. Ticciati leads it in
rather workmanlike fashion – there is nothing particularly distinctive in his
approach, although the playing is again first-rate. Symphony No. 101, the
popular “Clock” of 1794, fares better, the contrast between the rather eerie
opening of the first movement and the bright main section handled very well, and
the tick-tock sound in the second movement (whence the work’s nickname) given
in proper context and not overemphasized. The dramatic closing of the symphony
is rousing and attractive, and the overall impression of this recording is the
happy one of musicians having as good a time with the music as Haydn intended
his audience to have.
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