Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 and
5. Concentus Musicus Wien conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt. Sony. $13.99.
Dvořák: Symphony No. 6;
Slavonic Dances, Op. 46, No. 8 and Op. 72, No. 3. Houston Symphony
conducted by Andrés Orozco-Estrada.
PentaTone. $19.99 (SACD).
Christopher Rouse: Symphonies
Nos. 3 and 4; Odna Zhizn; Prospero’s Rooms. New York Philharmonic conducted
by Alan Gilbert. Dacapo. $16.99.
Redes: The classic 1935 Mexican
film with a new recording of the score by Silvestre Revueltas.
Post-Classical Ensemble conducted by Angel Gil-Ordóñez. Naxos DVD. $19.99.
Nikolaus Harnoncourt’s death
on March 5, 2016 brought an end to any prospect of a new Beethoven cycle from
him, featuring his own period-instrument orchestra, the Concentus Musicus Wien.
Listeners are left only with one CD, Sony’s release of the Fourth and Fifth
Symphonies, to speculate about what could have been. The word “quirky” has to
appear somewhere in that speculation. The symphonies that Harnoncourt here
reconsiders – he made a recording of the full cycle with the Chamber Orchestra
of Europe in 1991 – are exceptionally well played and very thoughtfully, if
strangely, interpreted. No. 4 gets a wide-ranging, full-throated interpretation
in which prominent brass (the brass are excellent throughout) give the symphony
a grander and altogether larger footprint than it usually receives. Yet the
performance downplays certain instruments, notably the bassoon, which gives
this work an unusual flavor when a conductor chooses to draw attention to it –
just as the oboe in the first movement of No. 5 and the piccolo in that
symphony’s finale change the work’s character based on the degree to which a
conductor focuses on them. Harnoncourt makes an effort to adhere to Beethoven’s
original tempo indications, so this Fourth is fleet but by no means
rushed-sounding. And Harnoncourt seeks to lend it extra gravity and heft by
strongly accentuating tutti chords by
pausing slightly before having the orchestra attack them vigorously – an
approach that increases the music’s intensity at the expense of some of its
forward flow. The same approach to chords is used in the Fifth, but much less
successfully – by the very end of the symphony, Harnoncourt seems to be
conducting the conclusion of Sibelius’ Fifth rather than Beethoven’s. And aside
from the chordal emphasis, Harnoncourt has some other unusual ideas about the
Fifth. The famous opening motto is less accentuated than usual, for one thing;
and the second movement is treated as a kind of tone poem, with numerous tempo
changes that are not in the score but seem intended to make the whole movement
into a grand adventure along the lines of the first movement of Tchaikovsky’s
Fourth. The third movement, on the other hand, is superb, with lower strings
and brass biting and intense – and the fourth movement proceeds splendidly,
with Harnoncourt drawing attention to all the instruments Beethoven added
specifically for this movement (trombones, piccolo and contrabassoon) in a way
that enriches the whole performance, at least until the very end stops it in
its tracks. This is a carefully thought-out but, on the whole, strangely
unsatisfactory reading of these symphonies, as if Harnoncourt did not so much
think them through as over-think them to a point at which their emotional
connectivity was diminished.
The emotional connection is
on the slight side as well in the Houston Symphony’s performance of Dvořák’s Symphony No. 6 on PentaTone.
The most Brahmsian of Dvořák’s
symphonies, the Sixth needs grand scale, warmth and solid forward flow to come
across effectively; given those, it is very effective indeed. Unfortunately,
Andrés Orozco-Estrada decides
that the best way to delve into the symphony is to tinker with its tempo
indications, and this creates a series of speedups and slowdowns that
collectively make the work seem choppy and unfocused – very different from
Brahms’ Second, which is also in the key of D and which shares much of the
expansiveness of Dvořák’s
Sixth, including an especially long first movement. Orozco-Estrada repeatedly
gives the impression of wanting to get on with it in that opening movement,
then thinking better of rushing things and slowing them back down again. The
result is a kind of stuttering that is out of keeping with the smooth and very
beautiful flow that Dvořák
produced in this symphony. The recording itself is excellent, but the unfocused
interpretation makes it hard to garner full enjoyment of the fine sound and
high-quality playing of the orchestra. And the disc is really unconscionably
short: the only things on it are the symphony and two of the Slavonic Dances, resulting in a paltry
52 minutes of music on a premium-priced recording. Nothing here is actually
bad, but nothing is thoughtful or emotionally connected enough to recommend
wholeheartedly.
It is a general
reconsideration of Dvořák’s
symphonic output that is leading more conductors to program symphonies other
than his final three. But there are other forms of reconsideration in music
today as well, such as Christopher Rouse’s reexamination of Prokofiev’s
Symphony No. 2 in his own Symphony No. 3 of 2011. This is a reconsideration of
a reconsideration, since Prokofiev based his work on Beethoven’s final piano
sonata, No. 32. Prokofiev’s symphony is not often heard – it is a product of the
experimentalism of Paris in the 1920s, and its largely unremitting intensity
can be off-putting – but Rouse’s Third, after its explosive brass opening
mirroring Prokofiev’s, goes off in directions more reflective of Rouse’s own
style. The overall impression of Rouse’s symphony is one of hyperactivity: the
work generally moves quickly, and the first variation of the second movement, which
is in effect a scherzo, is the most intense of all. The juxtaposition of
intense dissonance with expressiveness in that second movement, which like
Prokofiev’s is a set of variations, is so extreme as to be difficult to hear at
times, but it is certainly effective – and the work, which gets its world première recording on a new Dacapo CD, is
very well played by the New York Philharmonic under Alan Gilbert. The three
other works here are also world première
recordings, all three of them having been commissioned by this orchestra while
Rouse (born 1949) was its composer-in-residence. Symphony No. 4, less striking
and easier to listen to than No. 3, includes some quotations from other composers’
works, for reasons that are not clear from the music itself; yet this symphony
has none of the balanced uncertainty or stylistic peculiarity of others filled
with or built around quotations, such as Shostakovich’s No. 15. Also on this CD
are the tone poems Odna Zhizn (2008)
and Prospero’s Rooms (2012). The
former, whose title means “A Life” in Russian, has enough turbulence and
turmoil to make it seem that the life in question was a difficult one –
although the music’s quiet, peaceful conclusion suggests that it ended well.
The latter tone poem is the shortest work on this disc and in many ways the
most effective. Based on Edgar Allan Poe’s thoroughly creepy The Masque of the Red Death, in which
Prince Prospero locks himself and his hangers-on into a palace of differently
colored and decorated rooms in the doomed hope of escaping a plague, Rouse’s
work is highly evocative of its source and musically involving enough to be
actually chilling. This recording offers a lot of Rouse’s music and will be of
most interest to those already familiar with the composer; Prospero’s Rooms might well make those who do not know Rouse’s work
seek out other pieces by him.
If the Rouse CD is a
specialty audio item, a new Naxos DVD of the film Redes is a specialty audio and
video one. Redes is the story of a
fishing village near Veracruz, Mexico. Originally planned as a documentary, it
was turned into a fictional film about poor fishermen struggling against
exploitation. Its title means “nets,” although the film was released in English
as “The Wave.” The film is noteworthy for the cinematography by Paul Strand,
less so for the direction by Fred Zinnemann and Emilio Gómez Muriel. Whatever the merits of the film itself, its music,
by Silvestre Revueltas, has long been recognized as significant. Revueltas, who
had not written film music before, created a dramatic and atmospheric score
whose effectiveness was clear from the outset: both Revueltas and conductor
Erich Kleiber made orchestral suites from it, and both those suites are still
performed (Kleiber’s more frequently). Interestingly, Revueltas’ complete score
has never been recorded before, so the recording by the Post-Classical Ensemble
under Angel Gil-Ordóñez – one
of the most inventive, clever and high-quality groups of its type – is a world
première. The music rarely
overlaps film dialogue, instead enhancing the story line and helping propel the
narrative in highly effective program-music fashion. As a result, this
recording of Redes is enjoyable from
a purely musical standpoint, whatever one’s opinion of the film itself may be.
This is music that does more than set scenes: it actively participates in them.
It is quite possible (and quite interesting) to close one’s eyes or simply turn
off the video portion of this DVD and listen to the music on its own, finding
out how well it tells the same story that the filmmakers are communicating
visually. To fill out the DVD after the one-hour movie, there is an additional
hour of bonus material in which Gil-Ordóñez,
producer Joseph Horowitz and others discuss various aspects of Redes and Revueltas from musical and
sociopolitical standpoints. Like the film music of Prokofiev and Shostakovich,
Revueltas’ work for Redes is a high
point of composition for a visual medium that, when it is supported by audio as
well-constructed as the best film music can be, is capable of communicating
with far greater impact than the pictures can on their own.
No comments:
Post a Comment