Sullivan: Songs. Mary Bevan,
soprano; Ben Johnson, tenor; Ashley Riches, bass-baritone; David Owen Norris,
piano. Chandos. $18.99 (2 CDs).
Nadia Boulanger: Songs; Works for
Piano, for Cello and Piano, and for Organ. Nicole Cabell, soprano; Alek
Shrader, tenor; Edwin Crossley-Mercer, baritone; Amit Peled, cello; François-Henri Houbart, organ; Lucy
Mauro, piano. Delos. $24.99 (2 CDs).
Let it be said immediately
that these are specialty items, fascinating in their way for revealing sides of
these composers that will be quite unfamiliar to most listeners – yet in both
cases revealing rather too much and, if anything, confirming that the careers
for which Sir Arthur Sullivan and Nadia Boulanger were far better known are
ones at which they were in fact far better.
Sullivan’s 14 collaborations
with W.S. Gilbert are the works for which he is justifiably famed, even though
he wrote quite a few other stage works (the grand opera Ivanhoe; the late and rather odd The Beauty Stone; two even later operas, The Rose of Persia and The
Emerald Isle, both to libretti by Basil Hood; as well as ballets and
incidental music). Sullivan also wrote choral, orchestral, chamber and church
music – and a great number of songs. The exact number is rather hard to
determine, since he sometimes offered the same music with different words (e.g., “In the Summers Long Ago” is also
“My Love Beyond the Sea,” and “Bride from the North” is also “Bride of the
Isles” and “The White Plume”). Furthermore,
Sullivan’s songs sometimes occur within
theatrical works: “Love Laid His Sleepless Head” in The Merry Wives of Windsor, for instance, and “Little Maid of
Arcadee” in Thespis. So it is hard to
know whether to deem them songs or parts of a larger theatrical production. Be
all that as it may, Sullivan’s songs are little-enough known so that the very
well-performed and generously proportioned two-CD set from Chandos is extremely
welcome for anyone interested in less-familiar (and admittedly lesser) Sullivania.
There is almost two-and-a-half hours of music here, and listening to the
recording straight through is well-nigh impossible: these songs were mostly
intended as individual pieces, and almost all come across better that way. That
said, there are two cycles here that are of considerable interest: Five Shakespeare Songs (1866) and The Window; or, the Songs of the Wrens
(1871), to words by Alfred, Lord Tennyson – ones that the poet laurate
understandably decided after writing them that he would have preferred to
retract (Sullivan would not hear of it). In addition to Tennyson, Sullivan
favored lyrics by the short-lived Lionel H. Lewin (1848-1874) and a scattering
of better-known literary figures: Victor Hugo, Robert Burns, Percy Bysshe
Shelley. He also wrote songs to Biblical texts and in several languages: “Oh!
ma charmante,” with words by Hugo, is the 1872 French version of a song that
also appeared in Italian in 1873 as “Oh! bella mia” and in English in 1874 as
“Sweet Dreamer.” Confused though the pedigree and enumeration of Sullivan’s
songs may be, the one thing that this fine recording makes clear is that the
composer was quite sensitive to whatever words he chose to set. The songs are
scarcely trailblazing in expressiveness, harmony or overall construction, but
they are without exception written to fit the words, emphasizing the verbal
meanings and building upon the feelings and descriptions evoked by the
language. In his collaborations with Gilbert, Sullivan was often frustrated at
the primacy that the words seemed to receive over the music (shades of Richard
Strauss’ Capriccio!). In these songs,
though, he seems to have achieved a balance that he deemed suitable: Sullivan
wrote songs from 1855, when he was just 13, until the year of his death, 1900,
and would surely not have continued doing so had he been dissatisfied with the
expressive potential created by words and music together. It is true that
nothing in this generous helping of well-sung, well-played music will dislodge
the impression that Sullivan was at his best when paired with Gilbert (who
provided the words for only one of the songs heard here). But it is also true
that this recording shows Sullivan to be a composer whose skills did not lie
only on the stage or only in the comic: there is much here that is romantic,
delicate, expressive, and simply beautiful.
If Sullivan tends to be seen
as a narrow composer, Nadia Boulanger tends not to be seen as one at all. The
long-lived and brilliant pedagogue (1887-1979) was, however, a composer of some
note in her earlier life, although she later devoted herself to promoting the
music of her younger sister, Lili, and once famously told Gabriel Fauré, “If there is one thing of which I
am certain, it is that I wrote useless music.” Yet this self-deprecating
appraisal is not so, certainly not on the basis of a new two-CD Delos recording
featuring 37 Nadia Boulanger compositions, including 13 that have never been
recorded before. What is so is that
unlike Lili (1893-1918), who accomplished much compositionally in her short
life, Nadia never moved significantly beyond a variety of models with which she
clearly felt close kinship. In other words, all the music here is derivative,
to a greater or lesser extent, and all of it has a recognizable resemblance to
the music of other, much-better-known composers of the late 19th and
early 20th centuries. Like the Sullivan set, this one offers a
generous amount of music – nearly two hours – but little that is likely to keep
listeners returning for additional hearings. Nadia’s 26 songs sound very much
like the work of Debussy, occasionally shaded not with any highly personal
style but with a soupçon of
Saint-Saëns and touch of
Franck. Nadia was also clearly familiar with Russian composers of the
late-Romantic era; and although less prone than Sullivan to settings in multiple
languages, she did write three songs to German words – but without anything
particularly Germanic in the settings themselves. The performers handle the
material admirably and idiomatically, but nothing here is particularly striking
or, indeed, especially original in sound or setting: the music is not bad but
merely ordinary. As for the instrumental works, those for piano are Vers la vie nouvelle and Trois pièces pour piano;
there are also Trois pièces
for cello and piano; and, for organ, Trois
improvisations and Pièce
sur des airs populaires flamands. Although these are not easy works, none
of them is especially difficult; all come across as occasional pieces, the
occasions perhaps being practice sessions for some of Boulanger’s more-advanced
students. The last organ work connects to an opportunity missed in this
recording, for although these pieces represent Nadia’s complete works in these
specific forms, they are not all the
music she wrote. In particular, in 1912, Nadia wrote a flamboyant and rather
silly six-movement work called Fantasie
(variée) for piano and orchestra – one that goes well beyond the
rather mild “airs populaires flamands”
in the solo-organ piece to produce a work somewhat on the order of Ernő Dohnányi’s Variations on a Nursery Tune,
and written in something of the same thumbing-one’s-nose-at-the-world spirit.
It is unfair to criticize this release for what it does not include, but the
reality is that Nadia’s Fantasie
(variée) shows a far less serious and
sober, far less academic side of the famous teacher, and one that it would have
been delightful to experience along with the well-made but ultimately rather nondescript
items offered here. Perhaps an enterprising recording company will decide to present,
at some point, a CD containing Nadia’s Fantasie (variée), Dohnányi’s Variations,
Shostakovich’s arrangement of Tea for
Two, and a few other works in the same spirit. That would be a spirited
release indeed.
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