Mahler: Symphony No. 4.
Dorothea Röschmann, soprano;
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Mariss Jansons. RCO Live. $21.99
(SACD).
Sibelius: Scaramouche—complete
ballet. Turku Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Leif Segerstam. Naxos.
$12.99.
Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 5
and 7. Wiener Philharmoniker conducted by Leonard Bernstein. C Major
Blu-ray Disc. $39.99.
Scriabin: Symphonies Nos. 3 (“La
Divin Poème”) and 4 (“Le Poème de l’extase”). London
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Valery Gergiev. LSO. $14.99 (SACD).
Cimarosa: Opera Overtures, Volume
4—I sdegni per amore; La finta Frascatana; I tre amanti; Le donne rivali; I
finti nobili; Il pittor parigino; L’amante combattuto dalle donne di punto (La
Biondolina); Giunio Bruto; L’amor costante. Czech Chamber Philharmonic
Orchestra Pardubice conducted by Michael Halász. Naxos. $12.99.
Offenbach: Overtures and
Orchestral Music—“Orphée aux enfers”; “La Belle Hélène”;
“Le Voyage dans la lune”; “La Fille du tambour-major”; “Les Contes d’Hoffmann”;
“Barbe-bleue”; “Le Mariage aux lanternes”; “La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein”;
“Vert-Vert”; “La Vie parisienne.” Orchestre de la Suisse Romande conducted
by Neeme Järvi. Chandos. $19.99
(SACD).
Florent Schmitt: Antoine et Cléopatre—Six
épisodes symphoniques en deux suites d’apres le drame de
Shakespeare; Le Palais hanté—Étude symphonique pour
“Le Palais hanté” d’Edgar Poë. Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta. Naxos. $12.99.
Even in his most
monochromatic symphony – the composer himself gave its color as “sky blue” –
Mahler includes elements of drama. For a composer who never wrote an opera, he
had a fine sense of how to move an audience from one emotion to another. This
is more explicit in other symphonies than in the Fourth, but even here, there
is progression – essentially from exaltation to higher exaltation, with some
uncertainties and byways along the road (primarily in the second movement). The
new performance by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra under Mariss Jansons
manages both to keep the symphony on an even keel and to showcase its progress
– a fine combination. Recorded live in February 2015 and released on the
orchestra’s own label, this is a finely balanced and very well-played
performance by one of the world’s best orchestras, an ensemble that has been
intimately familiar with Mahler’s music since the composer’s own time. The
difficulties of the Fourth, Mahler’s most transparent and most lightly scored
symphony, lie in keeping it simple and parody-free. The Fourth confused early
audiences because it lacked so many of the obvious complexities of the first
three symphonies, but it is in fact just as complicated – in a subtler way. Jansons
chooses tempos judiciously and keeps the pacing of all the movements steady and
clear; he manages to combine excitement with placidity in a very winning way.
In the finale, soprano Dorothea Röschmann
sings with clarity and simplicity, although her voice is not quite as childlike
as would be ideal for this movement: it is key here to have the movement,
toward which all the rest of the symphony ascends, delivered with the greatest
possible simplicity of sound (Leonard Bernstein at one time even had a boy
soprano sing it). If there is a bit too much sophistication to Röschmann’s voice, if her phrasing is
sometimes on the mannered side (especially in the very slow final verse), her
soprano is nevertheless light enough and pleasant enough to convey effectively
the imagined emotions of a child in Heaven – providing a fine conclusion to a
very strong overall performance.
Mahler and Sibelius strongly
disagreed about the appropriate content of symphonies. While Mahler’s tend to
burst at the seams with drama, Sibelius’ are generally cooler, more cerebral –
not without drama, certainly, but not imbued with it, either. Yet Sibelius,
unlike Mahler, composed directly for the stage, less significantly in his
single opera than in the music he wrote for no fewer than 13 plays. The
complete music for one of these, Scaramouche,
is offered by Leif Segerstam and the Turku Philharmonic Orchestra in the sixth
and last Naxos CD devoted to Sibelius’ theater works. Scaramouche was actually a pantomime, not a play with dialogue, so
the music was particularly important for mood-setting and for carrying the
drama forward effectively. The work’s plot is not especially trenchant: the
title character is a mysterious hunchbacked dwarf whose viola playing entices a
young wife away from her husband; the wife kills the dwarf, who then reappears
to her – causing her to dance herself to her own death. Sibelius makes the most
of the atmospheric elements of this rather overdone drama – which, if nothing
else, turns on the bewitching power of music itself – while avoiding
entanglement in its absurd or simply silly portions. The music moves
effectively from initial scenes of warmth, charm and innocence to increasingly
dark places and the eventual pathos-filled (if not exactly tragic) conclusion.
Most of the music is slow: Sibelius draws out the characters’ actions and
emotions through a series of sections marked Lento assai, Poco moderato, Adagio, Allegretto, Andantino, Moderato,
and so on. In the absence of stage action, the music does not hang together
particularly well – its illustrative purposes are quite clear – but Sibelius’
care in orchestration and mood-setting come through very well, and Segerstam
leads the work with care in both pacing and balance, bringing out Sibelius’
characteristic attentiveness to orchestration particularly well. Although not
highly dramatic in a conventional sense, Scaramouche,
which dates to 1913, clearly shows how Sibelius, in his mature years, used
music to support and enhance a drama.
As for those
not-as-dramatic-as-Mahler’s symphonies, one conductor determined to plumb
Sibelius for every bit of drama he did
offer was Leonard Bernstein, whose late-in-life recordings of Nos. 1, 2, 5 and
7 are now available on Blu-ray Disc on the C Major label. Bernstein (1918-1990)
recorded a complete Sibelius cycle with the New York Philharmonic in the 1960s,
but did not live to complete a second one with the Vienna Philharmonic.
Nevertheless, the four symphonies that he did conduct are more than enough to
show significant changes in Bernstein’s attitude to this music, to which he
brings a number of controversial approaches. By and large, the tempos are slow
– in some cases extremely so. When Bernstein does decide to speed things up, he
often does so at such a hectic pace that it takes an orchestra of the Vienna
Philharmonic’s sky-high quality to keep up with the music. And Bernstein’s
podium manner – what some would call his antics – is more pronounced, more
accentuated in these late-in-life performances (which date to 1988-90) than in
earlier times. It is worth remembering Bernstein’s acknowledged expertise in
Mahler when listening to – and seeing – his conducting of these Sibelius works:
whatever the profound philosophical differences between the two composers,
Bernstein seems actively to seek elements they have in common, and is quite
willing to force resemblances even when none exist. Among these four
symphonies, No. 1 is handled best – and, significantly, least eccentrically.
The gorgeous sound of the orchestra comes to the fore here, the intensity of
the music is palpable, and there is very little that is exaggerated or forced
into garb that it wears poorly. This is a performance that can show listeners
unfamiliar with Bernstein why so many people thought so highly of him. The
other symphonies, though, are less convincing. No 2 is episodic and very, very
slow (it runs 53 minutes; elsewhere, it rarely lasts longer than 45). Silences
stretch forever, and this work, which seems to take traditional symphonic form
apart, itself seems to disintegrate. No. 5 is also slow, but not quite to the
same degree, and here the pacing has enough consistency so that the work
remains cohesive. The Vienna Philharmonic’s superb balance works particularly
well here – the interplay between woodwinds and lower strings is especially
impressive. But the symphony’s conclusion is genuinely odd: the final chords,
which are not evenly spaced and which are separated by long silences, seem to
stretch out forever, until the work seems not so much to finish as to collapse
onto and into itself. No. 7, in which Bernstein’s podium manner is more
reserved than in the others and has something magisterial about it, gets the
second-best of these readings, with sure understanding of the work’s tonal
complexity and a level of precision that gives Sibelius’ highly unified
conception a degree of clarity that it does not always receive. The sound of
this release is very good, and the engineers have handled the material well.
The video direction by Humphrey Burton is noteworthy for how well it stays
focused on Bernstein’s manners and mannerisms, giving viewers a chance to see
the music being shaped even as they hear it. But Bernstein does frequently
overdo his gestures and overall involvement to a distracting degree. This is a
(+++) release that fans of Bernstein will certainly want but that will be
unlikely to win him any new ones, despite the undoubted quality of the
performances of the First and Seventh Symphonies.
Valery Gergiev, however –
another uneven and frequently eccentric conductor – will likely gain fans from his new LSO Live recording of symphonic
Scriabin. This (++++) release pairs La
Divin Poème, which Scriabin designated as his Third, with Le Poème de l’extase, which he did not
formally number as a symphony at all but which is nevertheless often labeled
No. 4 (Scriabin did sometimes refer to it that way). Gergiev’s versions,
recorded live in March and April 2014, place Scriabin’s highly unusual sound
world firmly within the vast compass of Russian symphonic production. Warmth is
the overarching element here, the sort of warmth that comes from lush-sounding
strings paired with finely rounded, burnished brass tone and woodwinds that are
about as far from being shrill as it is possible to be. The London Symphony
gives Gergiev much of the sound that would be expected from a top-flight
Russian orchestra, and that is really quite an accomplishment. Symphony No. 3
requires its four movements to be played straight through without pause,
presenting interpretative difficulties as well as risking musicians’ exhaustion
– much of the writing is quite demanding. But no strain shows here, as Gergiev
and the London players balance the passion and tenderness of parts of the score
with the liveliness and intensity of other sections. Scriabin’s movement titles
connect well with the music only for those immersed in the composer’s
often-difficult-to-follow philosophical musings: they translate as Introduction, Struggles, Delights and Divine Play. But Gergiev is clearly
comfortable with the movements’ intentions and does a fine job of bringing out
the ways in which connections do appear. As for Le Poème de l’extase, in which “ecstasy” refers to something
artistic rather than anything physical, a full appreciation of the work
involves accepting statements about it that the composer wrote or specifically
approved as explanatory, such as: “The stronger the pulse beat of life and the
more rapid the precipitation of rhythms, the more clearly the awareness comes
to the Spirit that it is consubstantial with creativity itself.” The written
material does seem rather puerile, but the music does not – certainly not as
Gergiev handles it. The timeless transcendence of the music, created by Scriabin’s
use of whole-tone-based harmonies, comes through here with clarity – although
without specific or definitive meaning – and the work becomes, under Gergiev’s
direction, one into which listeners can subsume their consciousness and abandon
any attempts to understand the music intellectually, instead simply
experiencing it. The result is an unusual and uplifting experience.
For something that is still
dramatic but is considerably more down-to-earth, and still of (++++) quality,
there is the fourth Naxos release of opera overtures by Domenico Cimarosa,
performed by the Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice under Michael
Halász. Like the first three
volumes in this series, the fourth one offers largely interchangeable music
that is uniformly well-constructed, cleverly orchestrated, and highly appealing
in scene-setting – even if it is not clear just which scenes any particular
overture is designed to set. Cimarosa sometimes created three-movement
sinfonias as opera openers and sometimes produced more-focused, single-movement
pieces that more closely resemble what audiences now think of as an opera overture.
But there was no particular rhyme or reason to his use of one form or the other
– it is not as if, for example, he moved from one approach to the other over
time. Cimarosa was a dramatist first and foremost, and his overtures, whether
to comic works or serious ones, were intended to help the audience settle into
the theater and get into the appropriate mood for what was to come. The
orchestra plays all nine works on this CD with enthusiasm and involvement, not seeking depths that are not there but
also being careful not to turn the works into throwaways – they are too
well-made to be disposed of so lightly. Interestingly, the last piece here, the
overture to L’amor costante, is
almost certainly not by Cimarosa: it
appears to have been composed by someone else (exactly who is unknown) and then
attached to Cimarosa’s opera. Yet it sounds like a perfectly fine
curtain-raiser that might as well be by Cimarosa even if internal evidence indicates
that it is not.
Cimarosa died in the first
year of the 19th century (1801), and as the century progressed, the
tendency to have people other than composers create overtures to stage works
actually increased. It was firmly established by the second half of the
century: the well-known overtures to Gilbert and Sullivan’s operettas were very
rarely written by Sullivan himself. The same is true for most of the overtures
to the works of Jacques Offenbach: the overtures’ themes come directly from the
stage works, but the assembly of those themes into an opening piece was only
rarely done by Offenbach himself. This in no way detracts from the charms and
melodiousness of Offenbach’s overtures – in fact, it is precisely because the
melodies are so enchanting that arrangers (some known, some unknown) were able
to produce overtures with staying power at least equal to that of the stage
works themselves. On a new and very fine-sounding (++++) Chandos SACD, Neeme Järvi and Orchestre de la Suisse
Romande offer what might be called a potpourri of Offenbachiana, including very
well-played versions of pieces both familiar and less known. Offenbach’s stage
works fall broadly into two categories: the sarcastic, biting ones written
before the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71 and the more fantastical, much less
satirical ones written afterwards. There is a generous helping of both here –
although it would have been nice if they had been presented chronologically on
the disc, showing how Offenbach’s style evolved (the booklet notes actually do
discuss the pieces in chronological order). Järvi has some tendency to push tempos in these works, both the
slow ones and the fast, so slower passages (for instance, from Les Contes d’Hoffmann) can drag a bit,
while faster ones can seem a touch too frenetic. On the whole, though, Järvi
takes the measure of this music smartly, and the orchestra is responsive and
bright, although not quite as warm in tone or as sectionally well-balanced as
the very best Viennese and German orchestras. The more-extended pieces here
come off particularly well, including the overtures to Orphée aux enfers and La
Belle Hélène, as well as the
much-less-often-heard opening of Vert-Vert.
Some of the briefer works get somewhat short shrift, notably the overture to Barbe-bleue, but as a whole, this is a
recording filled with delights, giving listeners a chance to hear just how
wonderful a melodist Offenbach was – and why many composers, among them
Sullivan, Suppé, and Johann
Strauss Jr., sought in their own works to produce the apparently effortless
melodic flow and instantly hummable tunes that seemed to come to Offenbach so
naturally.
A dramatist/composer of a
later time, Florent Schmitt (1870-1958) was strongly influenced by composers
who were important in France after Offenbach’s time had passed – specifically,
Fauré and Massenet, who were
among his teachers, and Ravel and Satie. Schmitt is not, however, easy to pin
down stylistically, since he drew inspiration as well from German composers
(Wagner and Richard Strauss), and in fact his pro-German sympathies during the
1930s were largely responsible for the later neglect of his music. On the basis
of a new (++++) Naxos recording of some of his works, featuring the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra under JoAnn Falletta, Schmitt’s music is overdue for
revival. His rhythms are complex, his orchestration clever and colorful, his
blend of strength and lyricism impressive and very much of the 20th
century. Schmitt’s material for Antoine
et Cléopatre was composed in 1920 as a series of ballet scenes,
intended to appear between the acts of Shakespeare’s tragedy; the composer
gathered the six scenes into two suites that together effectively paint a
picture of the play’s exploration of the grand sociopolitical theme of empire
and the highly personal one of romantic love. Suitably, the first suite ends
with the battle of Actium, the second with Le
Tombeau de Cléopâtre. This is difficult music to
grasp, lying partially within Impressionism and partially in a kind of Scriabinesque
mysticism. It is not easy to play, either, but Falletta and the Buffalo
musicians handle it very stylishly, although a little more fullness in the
strings would have been welcome. Antoine
et Cléopatre is paired here with another expressive and unusual
work, a tone poem of sorts even though the composer labeled it Étude
symphonique. This is an earlier piece (1904) based on Mallarmé’s translation of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Haunted Palace, a dramatic and
highly effective poem (eventually incorporated into The Fall of the House of Usher) in which insanity is compared to
the deterioration of a noble building. Poe was highly influential in France,
notably with Charles Baudelaire and the Symbolists, and Schmitt seems to
channel Symbolism in this piece, which is carefully scored, expressively nuanced
and very effectively orchestrated. It would be a stretch to describe Schmitt as
a major composer, but there is much to admire in his handling of the dramatic
elements of Shakespeare and Poe, and Falletta – a tireless champion of
less-known but worthy works and their creators – here makes a very strong case
for hearing his music more often.
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