Wagner: Complete Overtures; Orchestral
Music from the Operas; Siegfried Idyll. Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by
Yuri Simonov; Luxembourg Radio Orchestra and Hamburg Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Alois Springer; St. Louis Symphony Orchestra conducted by Jerzy
Semkow; Bamberger Symphoniker conducted by Heinrich Hollreiser. Brilliant
Classics. $16.99 (3 CDs).
Weber: Complete Overtures.
WDR Sinfonieorchester conducted by Howard Griffiths. CPO. $16.99.
Shostakovich: The Complete String
Quartets. Quatuor Danel (Marc Danel and Gilles Millet, violins; Tony Nys,
viola; Guy Danel, cello). Alpha. $27.99 (5 CDs).
The ability to follow a
composer’s development over years, even decades, by hearing many works written
in the same form or for the same purpose, is one of the great pleasures of
comprehensive CD sets like these. If only the companies releasing them
understood that and placed the works in chronological order! Here are three
excellent, highly expressive sets of performances that take listeners from
early in a composer’s musical life to the end of it, all three of them marred
by production decisions to release the works as a hodgepodge rather than a
sequence from earliest to latest. Of course, it is possible for listeners to
rearrange the material – and the disc sequences, in the case of multi-disc sets
– but it is irritating to have to do so, and really, what is the point being
made by requiring buyers to do that in order to hear the material in the most
intriguing and interesting way? To be sure, there is some excuse for this in
case of the Brilliant Classics release of Wagner’s overtures, preludes and
non-vocal opera music. This is one of those combinatory packages, a mixture of
analog and digital recordings made over decades, with two full CDs featuring
the Philharmonia Orchestra under Yuri Simonov and a third disc containing four
works performed by four different orchestras under three different conductors. Yet
the sequencing is odd even within the Simonov CDs, which end with the prelude
to Die Meistersinger after starting
with that to Parsifal (whose “Good
Friday Music” then appears on the third CD). Listeners who can put up with the
mishmash sequence will hear some excellent performances here. From Der Ring des Nibelungen there are “The
Ride of the Valkyries,” “Forest Murmurs,” “Siegfried’s Rhine Journey” and
“Siegfried’s Funeral March.” The “Prelude und Liebestod” from Tristan und Isolde is here, along with
the overtures to Rienzi, Der fliegende
Holländer and Tannhäuser,
plus the preludes to Act I and Act III of Lohengrin.
All these are conducted by Simonov with a sure hand and fine sense of rhythm
and drama. On the third CD, in addition to the “Good Friday Music” played by
the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra led by Jerzy Semkow, there are the overtures
to Das Liebesverbot with the
Luxembourg Radio Orchestra and Die Feen
with the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra, both conducted enthusiastically by Alois
Springer, although neither orchestra is really top-notch in this repertoire; and
Siegfried Idyll in an old but lovely
performance by the Bamberger Symphoniker under Heinrich Hollreiser. There is
nothing unfamiliar in this music – even the overtures to Die Feen and Das Liebesverbot
have been turning up more recently in concerts and recordings – but there is
considerable satisfaction in having all this material in a single,
good-if-not-quite-top-quality package, whose modest shortcomings of sound and
performance are more than compensated for by Brilliant Classics’ offering it at
an excellent price.
Carl Maria von Weber’s life
was much shorter than Wagner’s – Weber died of tuberculosis at age 39 – which
makes the extent of his development in the theatrical and operatic field all
the more remarkable. Romantic German opera was launched by Weber and, after
him, Heinrich Marschner, whose ties to Wagner’s first opera, Die Feen, are quite clear. Surviving
overtures from Weber include 10 from theatrical works and a concert piece, the
popular Jubelouvertüre.
CPO’s new recording includes that plus the nine accessible theatrical pieces
(the 10th, to the early Waldmädchen,
is held at the music library of the Mariinsky Theatre and has not been made
available for study or performance). Chronologically, these works range from
the opening to Peter Schmoll und seine
Nachbarn (1801) to that for Oberon
(1826), and include, in chronological sequence, the overtures to the operas Der Beherrscher der Geister, Silvana, Abu
Hassan, Der Freischütz and Euryanthe. There are also overtures written as part of the
incidental music for Turandot and Preciosa. For a recording, there are
many logical ways to arrange these pieces: strictly by chronology, certainly, or
perhaps with the opera lead-ins chronological and then the non-operatic pieces
in their order of composition. There is, however, no apparent logic to the
presentation here – Peter Schmoll is
placed second on the disc and Oberon
fourth, for example. This is really a shame, because Howard Griffiths, a
conductor who seems especially well attuned to less-known music and is quite
adept in handling stage works, does a very fine job with every piece here, and
clearly has a sense of the elements that make each one special: the “Turkish”
scoring of Abu Hassan, the intensely
atmospheric elements of Der Freischütz,
the use of violas and cellos playing above clarinets in their lowest register
in Oberon, and so forth. Listeners
need to unscramble the sequence of CD tracks to get the best sense of Weber’s
compositional mastery and the increasing sophistication of his orchestration.
That is too bad, but it is actually worth the effort for a chance to explore
some of the fascinating musical innovations Weber made during his all-too-brief
life.
Chronology is also crucial,
perhaps even more so than in Weber’s case, for full appreciation of the
quartets of Shostakovich. But the new five-CD Alpha release of the Quatuor
Danel’s performances – which were originally made available a decade ago and have
now been repackaged – is so far out of order as to be bizarre. One CD, for
example, sandwiches the autobiographical, near-suicidal No. 8, the most
frequently played of the quartets, between the penultimate quartet, No. 14, and
the nearly atonal No. 12. It is hard to imagine any conceivable reason for
this. The quartets were written between 1938 and 1973, and certainly there are
some thematic connections that could be used to organize them – for example,
Nos. 4 and 5 make a pair of sorts, as do Nos. 7 and 8; Nos. 5, 8 and 11 are
exceptionally dark, while Nos. 6, 9 and 12 seem determined to be brighter (not
always successfully). But there is no apparent organizing principle at all in
this release, which is a real shame, because the performances are so unusual
for this music as to be very much worth hearing and re-hearing. The ne plus ultra for Shostakovich’s
quartets has always been the approach of the Borodin Quartet, whose exceptional
expressiveness and dyed-in-the-wool pessimism set an unequalled standard among
recordings. Quatuor Danel was actually trained by the Borodin Quartet, but in
addition to absorbing lessons about balance, phrasing and how to attack sections
and individual notes, this foursome clearly decided to proffer a less-agonized
version of the music. That means greater lyricism than is usually heard in
these works, touches of dry irony rather than (or in addition to) ones of deep
despair, and instrumental tone that is lighter than that of the Borodin Quartet
and, indeed, lighter than is usual in Russian chamber ensembles. The emotional
reach of the quartets as played by Quatuor Danel is greater than that of the
Borodin Quartet, but whether that is a good or bad thing will be a matter for
each listener to decide. Certainly the tonal beauty of, for example, the second
movements of Nos. 8 and 10 is a surprise here, coming as it does without
sacrifice of intensity. The warmth and rhythmic flexibility of the ensemble
playing is first-rate throughout, and is especially telling in the final three
quartets, which emerge here with a greater sense of humanity than usual. These
are unusual readings and are not without flaws, a notable extramusical one
being the tendency of quartet members to mark entrances with all-too-audible
heavy breathing (this is common in chamber groups, but not usually recorded
with this level of unwanted clarity). Listeners familiar with the extremely
deep and very Russian pessimism of the finest performances of these quartets
may well find Quatuor Danel’s versions to be, if not a breath of fresh air,
then a somewhat light approach, perhaps one more appropriate for central
European music than for that of Russia. But even listeners who decide they do
not want this as their first recording of the Shostakovich quartets may well be
interested in it as a second (or third) one, because it shines a fresh light on
music that is certainly dour but need not always be as darkly depressive and
despairing as it frequently is in other readings. Interestingly, Quatuor
Danel’s approach makes the most sense when the quartets are heard in
chronological sequence, as their increasingly acerbic nature and their
responses to events in the world and in Shostakovich’s life emerge more clearly
over time. This is yet another reason to be dissatisfied with the order in
which the quartets are presented in this recording – but not a reason to be
dissuaded from listening to the frequently revelatory readings themselves.
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