Shostakovich: Violin Concertos
Nos. 1 and 2. Frank Peter Zimmermann, violin; NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester
conducted by Alan Gilbert. BIS. $21.99 (SACD).
Paganini: 24 Caprices, Op. 1,
with piano accompaniment by Schumann. Maristella Patuzzi, violin; Mario
Patuzzi, piano. Dynamic. $19.99.
Vivaldi: Twelve Concertos, Opp.
11 and 12. Federico Guglielmo, violin; Pier Luigi Fabretti, oboe; L’Arte
dell’Arco. Brilliant Classics. $11.99 (2 CDs).
Cimarosa: Opera Overtures, Volume
5: Atene edificata; Componimento drammatico; La bella Greca (Il matrimoni
impensati); La felicità inaspettata; La villana
riconosciuta; I due supposti conti, ossia Lo sposo senza moglie; Le trame
deluse, ossia I raggiri scoperti; Il marito disperato (Il marito geloso);
L’Olimpiade; La ballerina amante; Il fanatico burlato. Czech Chamber
Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice conducted by Patrick Gallois. Naxos. $12.99.
There is very little that is
straightforward in the music of Shostakovich, and this is nowhere clearer than
in his two complex, difficult and variegated violin concertos. Frank Peter
Zimmermann gives splendid readings of both on a new BIS release, wallowing
fully in what sentimentality there is, then switching without apparent effort
to the dry acerbity so common in Shostakovich’s music, finding ways both to
highlight and to balance the numerous (and almost mutually exclusive) demands
of the disparate movements. There is something deeply unsettling in the way
Shostakovich repeatedly juxtaposes musical forms and musically expressed
emotions that do not fit each other particularly well – and makes everything work, at least in hands as skilled as
those of Zimmermann and conductor Alan Gilbert, who whips up the NDR
Elbphilharmonie Orchester (better known under its former name, NDR
Sinfonieorchester) into a froth of intensity that fits these works with
glovelike precision. The odd scherzo of the first concerto, superficially
bright but always containing a hint of darkness, comes through especially well
here, but Zimmermann also makes much of the crepuscular Nocturne that opens the
concerto and even manages to find a way to tie the initially trivial-seeming
Burlesque to all that has come before, including the technically demanding
cadenza that immediately precedes it. Zimmermann does just as well with the
second concerto, with the mixed emotions of the central Adagio – now
despairing, now merely sad, now quietly contemplative – coming through
especially effectively. These are excellent, highly knowing performances that,
although thoughtful, give the impression of flowing naturally from an intuitive
understanding of the complexity of Shostakovich’s personality and the way it is
reflected in music of so distinctive a character – or, more accurately, of so many
distinctive characters.
The new Dynamic release of
Paganini’s 24 Caprices, Op. 1,
featuring violinist Maristella Patuzzi, reflects two characters in particular:
that of Paganini the virtuoso showman and surprisingly adept composer, of
course, and also that of Robert Schumann – who, influenced by Paganini in
important ways early in his own career, produced at the end of that career (and
of his life) a set of piano accompaniments for these solo violin works. On the
face of it, this was an exercise in futility and, it could be argued, further
evidence of the deterioration of Schumann’s mind and creative spirit after he
was institutionalized. Certainly these 24 wonderful miniatures (some of them
not so miniature!) need no instrumentation beyond that of the violin. But in
Schumann’s time, music for unaccompanied violin was thought to be thin and
somehow incomplete, at least in some quarters; and besides, by producing
pianistic elements to go with the solo-violin ones, Schumann was quite clearly
paying tribute to Paganini, not in any way diminishing or minimizing his
accomplishments. The Schumann material is of course wholly unnecessary, but it
is fascinating: Schumann had so much respect for Paganini’s music, and such
understanding of it, that he created piano elements that neatly complement the
violin material without ever overwhelming it or preventing it from remaining in
the forefront – all this despite the fact that Schumann was himself a pianist. The
exceptional interweaving of violin and piano here may owe a little something
extra to the fact that Maristella Patuzzi performs with her father, pianist
Mario Patuzzi, with whom she has made other recordings: the two have a familial
bond that seems to extend to deeply similar understanding of the material and
strong mutual respect for each other’s contributions to these readings.
Certainly this is an unusual and, in the most literal sense, inauthentic
performance of the 24 Caprices. But
it is an excellent interpretation of the authentic Schumann elements of a
composition that remains wholly Paganini’s while at the same time offering
fascinating glimmers of Paganini’s tremendous influence on one of his great
contemporary admirers.
Vivaldi’s contemporaries
were beginning to have significant influence on his violin compositions by
1729, the year of Vivaldi’s sets of concertos published as Op. 11 and Op. 12.
This was the time of Tartini and Locatelli, who – like Vivaldi himself – were
top-flight violinists and substantial composers for their chosen instrument. It
was also the time in which galant
style began to make itself widely known, and Vivaldi proved himself as
sensitive to stylistic developments as to the changing technical capabilities
of violinists. Most of the concertos in these sets – each containing six works
rather than the 12 of earlier groupings – are not particularly well-known,
perhaps because they have something of a “transitional” feeling about them, as
Vivaldi expanded and modified his style to stay abreast of new harmonic and
rhythmic expectations among performers and listeners alike. It is not certain
whether Vivaldi himself actually authorized these specific groupings, although
his authorship of the concertos themselves is not in dispute. Most of these
concertos are somewhat longer than Vivaldi’s earlier ones, and the slow
movements, in particular, tend to be spun off at greater length and with
greater emotional impact, if scarcely to the extent that those of later
composers would possess. The performances on Brilliant Classics by Federico
Guglielmo and his ensemble, L’Arte dell’Arco, are as historically informed and
consistently outstanding as all the Vivaldi readings by these players seem to
be. There are a few oddities in the groupings as heard here, such as the way
Guglielmo continues to arrange the concertos rather capriciously (the Op. 11
sequence is 5, 4, 2, 3, 1, 6; for Op. 12, it is 5, 1, 4, 2, 6, 3). But some of
the unexpected material traces directly to Vivaldi: one of these works (Op. 11,
No. 6) is actually an oboe rather than violin concerto, and one (Op. 12, No. 3)
is for strings and continuo without
solo violin – Vivaldi’s only known work of this type. There are also some
pleasant surprises to be heard here, such as the lovely pizzicato accompaniment in the central movement of Op. 12, No. 6,
and the greater depth of feeling throughout the minor-key concertos (three in
Op. 11, including the oboe concerto, and two in Op. 12). The stylistic
sensitivity and easy virtuosity of playing in these performances are winning,
and the chance to experience these mostly less-known but beautifully shaped
concertos is one that fans of Baroque music in general, and Vivaldi’s in
particular, will very much enjoy.
There is enjoyment to be had
in the fifth Naxos release of Cimarosa overtures as well – and here too the
primary aural elements are the strings, although in a few of these works
Cimarosa also shows himself able to use winds effectively. Cimarosa wrote more
than 80 operas, most of them light in a kind of pre-Rossinian Rossini mode. As
with many other composers (Rossini included), Cimarosa would sometimes reuse
overtures, and because Cimarosa’s overtures were not typically built around
themes from the operas that they opened, this was particularly easy to do.
Furthermore, many of his operas were performed under multiple titles, not only
in different stagings and different languages but also within Italy itself, as
they moved from Naples or other points of origin to other city-states within a
not-yet-united country. This explains the multiple titles of some overtures on
this CD and the others discs in this series. Cimarosa also wrote overtures in
two different styles: single-movement ones of the type now generally thought of
as fitting the word “overture,” and two-or-three-movement ones that may be
considered “sinfonias.” Since there is nothing that inherently links the
overtures heard here to their operas with any specificity, what this disc –
like its predecessors – offers is simply a wealth of well-made instrumental
music that is very much of its time and is performed with considerable élan by
the Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice under Patrick Gallois. This
is not to say that the overtures are all of a piece: in length alone, they range
from the three-movement, more-than-11-minute one to La bella Greca (also known as I
matrimoni impensati) to the charming, barely-there, one-and-a-half-minute
opening of La felicità
inaspettata. And although nine of the 11 works on this CD are opera overtures,
two have different provenances: Atene
edificata comes from a cantata that Cimarosa wrote at the court of
Catherine the Great of Russia, and Componimento
drammatico was produced for a cantata celebrating the birth of the
firstborn son of France’s ill-fated King Louis XVI. These pieces, in two and
three movements respectively, share the characteristics of the opera overtures:
they are well-constructed, focused primarily on the orchestra’s string section,
and sound like miniature sinfonias with no obvious connection to the
circumstances for which they were created. Cimarosa was an adept composer who
was very much in and of his time. His overtures are very pleasant to hear but
are, in the most part, not especially innovative and thus not, on an individual
basis, highly memorable.
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