Beethoven: Symphony No. 3.
Die Taschenphilharmonie conducted by Peter Stangel. Edition
Taschenphilharmonie. $18.99.
Richard Strauss: Ariadne auf
Naxos—Symphony-Suite; Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme—Suite. Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta. Naxos. $12.99.
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto; Méditation
in D minor from “Souvenir d’un lieu cher”; Sérénade mélancolique. Moonkyung
Lee, violin; London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Miran Vaupotić. Navona.
$14.99.
Perhaps the most
interestingly named orchestra in the world, Munich’s Taschenphilharmonie
(“Pocket Philharmonic”) is also engaged in one of the most interesting musical
experiments: to revive Arnold Schoenberg’s short-lived “Society for Private
Musical Performances” of the early 1920s and use its format to explore the
inner essence, essentially the skeleton, of numerous large-scale works.
Schoenberg and his colleagues wanted audiences to hear then-new and
then-radical music – their society’s programs were not announced in advance, so
no one could decide to stay away out of dislike of a particular work or
specific composer. Since the society could not afford full-scale performances,
Schoenberg and others undertook to arrange major, large-scale pieces for a very
small number of musicians. Mahler as chamber music? Yes, that is what resulted
– and since Peter Stangel and Die Taschenphilharmonie have revived the concept,
its strengths (as well as its obvious limitations) have become abundantly
clear. Now Stangel and 15 players – the string section consists of two violins,
a viola, a cello and a bass – have produced a fascinating reading of
Beethoven’s “Eroica.” It is a rendition wholly lacking in the scale that so
intimidated musicians of Beethoven’s time, and entirely without the broad
grandeur of the funeral march that has made that movement so effective for more
than two centuries. Yet it is a performance in which the final two movements
fit well with the first two, which so often overshadow them – one in which the
final variations on a theme from The
Creatures of Prometheus do not seem tacked-on or trivial, but come across
as a musically (if not narratively) effective capstone for the symphony as a
whole. It is a performance in which the opening two chords call the audience to
attention without sounding like the hammer blows of the later Fifth Symphony.
It is a performance to scale – not only to the scale of the small complement of
musicians but also to the underlying scale of the music. The framework shows
through here – indeed, the performance is of
the music’s framework – and the elegances of Beethoven’s instrumentation come
through particularly clearly in a reading in which there are as many wind
instruments as strings and the four-instrument brass section offers
chamber-music clarity and plays with care to avoid overwhelming the rest of the
ensemble. This is emphatically not
the symphony as Beethoven intended it to be heard – although neither did he
intend it to be performed by a massive, hundred-piece orchestra, as it so often
is. True, much of the warmth of the music disappears in this well-paced and
carefully considered approach, which admittedly is something of an intellectual
exercise. Instead of heat, what Stangel and the instrumentalists offer is a
level of clarity, of clean sound, of continuity and careful construction, that
many other performances fail to present. Probably this will not be anyone’s
first choice for a recording of the “Eroica,” but surely those who have long known,
loved and admired the work will gain new insights into it from this
performance. And for those who know German, there are four bonus tracks called Hörakademie, discussing specifics
of each of the four movements, with musical examples.
It is hard to see how
Stangel and his ensemble would reduce the tremendous sumptuousness of the music
of Richard Strauss to its basics – all those doublings and triplings are
integral to the effect of Strauss’ music – but we may find out someday. Until
then, first-rate full-orchestra performances of Strauss will just have to do,
and the latest one from the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra under JoAnn Falletta
does very well indeed. Falletta, an explorer, likes to look into little-known
and under-performed music, and at first glance there may seem to be little of
that here – but the Naxos CD deserves a second glance, because the longer of
the works on it, Ariadne auf
Naxos—Symphony-Suite, is a world première recording. Strauss never extracted a suite from this
wonderfully melodious opera; this one was created by D. Wilson Ochoa, and it
nicely highlights many of the musical gems of what has always been one of the
composer’s stranger works. Like Strauss’ final opera, Capriccio (1942), Ariadne auf
Naxos (original version, 1912) is an opera about opera, a work of art about
works of art, and its self-referential nature can be thoroughly confusing –
although it has considerably more action than does Capriccio and as a result is more frequently and more successfully
staged. In truth, the Buffalo Philharmonic’s impressive precision and sectional
balance are not quite all that the Strauss-Ochoa suite needs: a certain
devil-may-care opulence of tone is ideal for all Strauss’ music, and this level
of breadth and fullness is one that the Buffalonians do not possess.
Nevertheless, Falletta gets excellent playing from the ensemble, spinning out
the themes skillfully and showing the orchestra’s rhythmic skill again and
again. The seven movements of the suite are a potpourri of Straussian
techniques: extended solo sections, comedic elements, luxuriousness, and
melodic beauty. And the suite pairs quite nicely with one that Strauss did put together himself, using music
from Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme.
Originally, Ariadne auf Naxos was
supposed to be paired with Le Bourgeois
Gentilhomme for a mixed theater-and-opera evening that ran some six hours
(and is still occasionally revived in that form). There are clear resemblances
as well as obvious contrasts between the works themselves and in the nature of
the music Strauss created for both of them. Hearing first the music from Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme and then the
suite from Ariadne auf Naxos, as on
this recording, is just right: the play with incidental music was supposed to
be performed before the operatic divertissement.
Certainly this CD does not and cannot give the full flavor of the original
structure and planned juxtaposition. But Falletta’s usual sure-handed
conducting, and the orchestra’s clear grasp of Straussian intricacies and
beauties, provide a very intriguing and wholly successful view of two very
different works that have retained their rather uneasy partnership for more
than a century.
The luxuriousness of
Strauss’ orchestration has some things in common with the intensity and
expressiveness of Tchaikovsky’s, but it is possible to take both of those
characteristics a bit too far – and that is what violinist Moonkyung Lee does
on a new Navona CD. Tchaikovsky wrote less than 80 minutes’ worth of music for
violin and orchestra; his entire output fits neatly on a single compact disc.
Lee and conductor Miran Vaupotić do not offer it all, however: they omit two of
the three movements of Souvenir d’un lieu
cher (a work actually orchestrated by Glazunov) and pass over the lovely Valse-Scherzo. The reasons for the
omissions are not apparent. What is clear, though, is that Lee’s way with
Tchaikovsky is of the rather old-fashioned swooning school, with highly
emphatic treatment of emotionally moving phrases and plenty of rubato to tell audiences that such a
phrase is about to come. Indeed, the frequency of pauses before phrases becomes
something of a nervous tic here, frustrating to hear even though surely done
deliberately. This is most apparent in the Violin Concerto, which descends into
a glacial pace so frequently that it too often seems to exist largely in
stasis. At 38 minutes, this reading is exceptionally long – this is usually
about a 35-minute work, and can even handle being whirled away in under half an
hour, as Jascha Heifetz did. Other violinists, such as Jennifer Koh, also make
the concerto expansive, but they do so with more consistency than Lee, whose
performance is full of stops, starts and stutters. The first movement comes off
reasonably well in its faster sections and cadenzas, but the slower portions
simply drag; the second movement is better-paced and has pleasant warmth; but
the finale simply stops moving after about two minutes and never regains
momentum – this is an Allegro moderato
treatment of a movement that is marked Allegro
vivacissimo, which really should be an emphatic enough instruction to make
the composer’s intentions clear. The shorter works sound better: Lee seems more
comfortable with their largely uncomplicated emoting. Because of that and
because of some interpretative niceties in the concerto’s first movement, this
is a (+++) CD. But it will scarcely be any listener’s first choice for this
repertoire – all the more so because other recordings include the rest of
Tchaikovsky’s violin-and-orchestra compositions as well as the ones heard here.
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