Offenbach: Overtures to “Orphée aux enfers,” “La Fille du
tambour-major,” “L’Île de Tulipatan,” “Monsieur et Madame Denis,” “La Belle
Hélène,” “Vert-Vert,” “La Vie parisienne,” and “La Grande-Duchesse de
Gérolstein”; Ouverture à grand orchestra. Orchestre National de Lille conducted by Darrell Ang. Naxos. $12.99.
Czerny: Introduction e Rondo Brilliant in B-flat; First Piano Concerto,
in D minor; Introduction, Variations and Rondo on Weber’s Hunting Chorus from
“Euryanthe.” Rosemary Tuck,
piano; English Chamber Orchestra conducted by Richard Bonynge. Naxos. $12.99.
Nobody
would argue that music must have deep meaning in order to be enjoyable, but
there is an unspoken bias in that direction when it comes to classical music –
as opposed to pop music, which is generally assumed and most often intended to
be superficial. There are plenty of classical works that may have serious
underpinnings in terms of what the composers meant to communicate and how they
constructed the pieces, but that nowadays are enjoyable purely for how they
sound and for the joie de vivre that
emanates from them. Offenbach, for example, had more in mind than pure farce in
many of his operettas, although the earlier ones for a restricted number of singers
were, by and large, comedies for
their own sake. Still, the pacifism underlying La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein, the sendup of “modern” French
life as perceived by tourists in La Vie
parisienne, and the deliberately skewed take on ultra-serious classical-Greek
pretension in Orphée aux enfers and La Belle Hélène are not what listeners
are likely to focus on today. It is instead the apparently effortless
production of beautiful tunes, the unending smooth flow of the music, that will
delight anyone hearing the overtures to these works (although the more-serious
undercurrents still come through, to a degree, in complete performances of the
stage pieces). The overtures conducted by Darrell Ang on a new Naxos CD
featuring Orchestre National de Lille are all quintessential Offenbach, all
tuneful and charming and easily dismissible as trifles by anyone unaware of the
underlying plots of the works they introduce. Ang is not perhaps the best
advocate for this music, not having yet discovered the difference between being
lively and being frenetic – but he is only 38 years old and has time to slow
down a bit and allow Offenbach his expansiveness as well as the breathless pace
that the orchestra can barely handle in, for example, La Fille du tambour-major. And Ang deserves credit for including a
rarity on the CD: Ouverture à grand
orchestra is very early Offenbach indeed, dating to 1843, when the composer
was just 24. It is the only non-theatrical work on the disc, and while it lacks
the sheer impulsiveness and melodic beauty of the introductions to the later
stage works, it already shows how much promise as a composer was possessed by the
young Offenbach – who was at the time primarily a cellist. Listeners seeking
pleasure without any particular experiential depth will certainly gravitate to
this disc.
One conductor who over the years has consistently given Offenbach more
of his due in performances is Richard Bonynge, who is now 87 and shows little
sign of slowing down in his commitment to directing music with feeling and
elegance. Both are very much on display on a new Naxos CD of works by Carl
Czerny – works intended in their time to have some seriousness, even
pretension, but ones now best heard as enjoyable and very well-made pieces that
are a step or two beyond the salon but nowhere near the emotional intensity of composers
such as Beethoven, with whom Czerny studied for a time. To be sure, Czerny
absorbed some Beethovenian gestures, and they are in the forefront in his First Piano Concerto of 1811-12, especially
in the very extended first movement, which is longer than the totality of many
Mozart piano concertos. The seriousness of this work, which here receives its
world première recording, is evident throughout, and both Bonynge (himself a
fine pianist) and Rosemary Tuck perform the work with the grandeur, even
hauteur, that Czerny intended. But the overall impression of the piece is one
of donning its garb of intensity somewhat awkwardly. This is abundantly clear
when the slow movement proves very short and functions mainly as an intermezzo
before the brightness of the concluding Allegro
molto vivace. Czerny simply does not sustain, and may never have intended
to sustain, the sort of emotional depth that the work’s first movement
promises. Tuck and Bonynge certainly showcase the piece’s strengths, and the
English Chamber Orchestra plays with its usual fine intonation and clarity. But
Czerny as a composer seems more comfortable in the milieu of the Variations and Rondo on Weber’s Hunting
Chorus from “Euryanthe,” another world première recording – in fact, it is
surprising that two of the three works on this disc have never been recorded
before, since both are interesting in so many ways. These variations, which
date to 1824, are very extended indeed – again, about the length of many
complete Mozart piano concertos – and they turn and twist Weber’s music in
multiple ways while always remaining respectful of Euryanthe (an opera that itself deserves more attention than it
generally receives). Tuck and Bonynge are as well-matched here as in the
concerto, pacing themselves and each other with sureness and clearly bringing
out all the skillful methods in which Czerny uses the variation form. The CD
also includes one work that has been
recorded in the past and, indeed, is heard fairly often as a pianistic display
piece: Introduction e Rondo Brilliant in
B-flat, from about 1833, in which Tuck cuts loose and displays plenty of
the forthright virtuosity of which performers and audiences were so fond in
Czerny’s time and thereafter. Nothing heard on this CD qualifies as “deep”
music, and nothing strongly involves listeners’ emotions except, to an extent,
the concerto’s first movement. But if the pleasures of these pieces are
scarcely profound, they are nevertheless quite real, and the fine quality of
the performances helps produce a disc that is highly satisfying from start to
finish.
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