Schubert: Symphonies Nos. 3, 5 and 8
(“Unfinished”). City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra conducted by Edward Gardner.
Chandos. $19.99 (SACD).
Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake—1877 world première version. State Academic Symphony
Orchestra of Russia “Evgeny Svetlanov” conducted by Vladimir Jurowski.
PentaTone. $29.99 (2 SACDs).
Bruckner: Symphony No. 7. Altomonte Orchester St.
Florian conducted by Rémy Ballot. Gramola. $21.99 (SACD).
Mahler: Symphony No. 2. Ruby Hughes, soprano;
Sasha Cooke, mezzo-soprano; Minnesota Chorale and Minnesota Orchestra conducted
by Osmo Vänskä. BIS. $18.99 (SACD).
The care taken in the production of Super
Audio CDs, which are a kind of “CD-plus” medium playable both on stereo
equipment and, to greater advantage, on multichannel systems, can serve
symphonic music particularly well by bringing clarity to individual orchestral
instruments as well as fullness of sound to an orchestra as a whole. When
conductors pay particular attention to the details of a composer’s
instrumentation, well-produced SACDs can be especially beneficial in
reproducing the effects that the conductor is seeking. The first volume in
Edward Gardner’s planned cycle of Schubert symphonies with the City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra shows how well this works in fleet, light-footed
performances of two early symphonies and a reading of the “Unfinished” that
goes out of its way to find lucidity. The Third is the first symphony in which
Schubert really shows his own voice: it is still reminiscent of Haydn,
especially in the opening of the first movement, but its lilting themes and
easy flow seem less imitative of the older composer (or less of a tribute to
him) and more indicative of Schubert’s own tremendous melodic gifts. The Fifth,
the best-known of the early symphonies, uses a chamber-sized orchestra and gets
going immediately – no slow introduction here – with a vivacious theme that is
more Mozartian than Haydnesque but that has a recognizably Schubertian shape.
Schubert’s abrupt key changes during the movements here are quite
characteristic of his style, as is the headlong momentum of the symphony’s
finale, which Gardner takes at an unusually speedy pace (an approach similar to
what he offers in the finale of the Third) that takes some getting used to but
quickly becomes winning as the orchestra’s ability to sustain it becomes clear.
The “Unfinished” gets a lighter touch in its two movements under Gardner than
it usually receives, with understanding of the fact that, unusually, the two
are in nearly the same tempo: one is marked Allegro
moderato and the other Andante con
moto. Instead of trying for an inappropriate tempo contrast, Gardner opts
for exploration of the subtle differences in instrumental emphasis between the
movements – here the clarity of the Chandos sound is a great help. Schubert was
an inveterate non-finisher of symphonies – the Eighth is by no means his only
“Unfinished,” although it is the only one accorded that title – but conductors
have long found ways to make the two movements of No. 8 sound complete in their
own way. Gardner does this by careful attention to the movements’ pacing and instrumental
balance, with the result that this “Unfinished” feels satisfying, almost like
an extended concert overture rather than a portion of a symphony. The basically
light and delicate touch that Gardner brings to all three of these symphonies
bodes well for future releases of Schubert’s earlier symphonic works, although
it remains to be seen how it will translate to No. 9.
Tchaikovsky had already finished his early symphonies, Nos. 1-3, when he
created the ballet Swan Lake, which
dates to essentially the same time as his Symphony No. 4. The ballet only seems highly familiar today: the version
in which it is always heard is not the one Tchaikovsky intended, being
considerably shorter than the original, whose first performance was a disaster
(not because of the music but because of the staging). The standard Swan Lake of today was arranged after
Tchaikovsky’s death, and while it contains a great deal of wonderful music, it
has less of it than the composer wanted. It also has a different musical “story
arc,” because in its original conception, Swan
Lake was something of a hybrid between ballet and symphony – a kind of
symphony to be danced. The original sequence of music, the key signatures and
pacing, and the overall flow of the ballet, were all designed from a symphonic
perspective – a very creative and highly unusual approach that comes through
only imperfectly in Swan Lake as it
is usually heard. That makes the new PentaTone release featuring Vladimir
Jurowski conducting the State Academic Symphony Orchestra of Russia “Evgeny
Svetlanov” especially interesting, because Jurowski returns to the original Swan Lake score – which includes more
than two-and-a-half hours of music – and approaches the piece as an extended
symphonic poem, if not exactly a symphony. This means that he paces certain individual
elements so as to have them fit into a symphonic conception rather than be
effective as dances – which means, in a practical sense, that some parts of
this Swan Lake would be painfully
slow to dance, while others would be impossibly fast. Yet nothing here distorts
Tchaikovsky: all the warmth, the dark orchestration that would also appear in
the Fourth Symphony, the beautiful melodies and their elegantly expressive
presentation, are all present. This is Swan
Lake as musical storytelling almost in the mode of Liszt, with recurrent
motifs carefully developed and presented in various guises as the dark fairy
tale of love, loss and last-minute triumph progresses. The SACD sound here
contributes a level of clarity that allows middle voices of the orchestra to be
heard easily and Tchaikovsky’s finely honed balance of orchestral sections –
with brass as important to him as woodwinds were to Schubert – coming through
to fine effect. The symphonic style and dimensions that Tchaikovsky brought to Swan Lake are evident in this performance
after at most being hinted at in more-familiar versions of the music. This is a
reading that makes the ballet seem genuinely new by offering it in its oldest
form.
The many forms of Bruckner’s symphonies
are a thorny, ongoing issue for musicologists and conductors, but less so for
his Seventh than for others: the Nowak edition of 1954, based on Bruckner’s
1885 revision of his score, is the one usually followed. However, for his new
performance with the Altomonte Orchester St. Florian, Rémy Ballot has gone one
better than other conductors by using extremely recent (and, indeed,
still-in-progress) scholarship by Paul Hawkshaw to supplement the Nowak version
of the score. The noteworthy changes are few and will be mainly apparent to
scholars and those with longtime familiarity with the symphony – they primarily
have to do with phrasing and articulation, not orchestration or restoration of
dropped material. Nevertheless, the attention to the minutest detail that has
characterized all of Ballot’s Bruckner releases for Gramola is everywhere
evident both in the scholarly area and in the performance, abetted once more by
crystal-clear SACD sound. The orchestra’s astonishing proficiency in Bruckner
is even more surprising in light of the fact that it consists of both
professionals and student players: Ballot combines them to marvelous effect,
here as in earlier releases, and the result is a “Bruckner sound” quite unlike
that of other orchestras. The symphonies under Ballot are appearing in a
peculiar order: No. 3 (original version) was first, then No. 8, No. 9
(three-movement version), No. 6, No. 5, and now No. 7. And the nature of the
orchestra inevitably changes as its professionals pursue other commitments
while its students move on. This makes the consistency of the interpretations
all the more remarkable. Ballot has a genuine vision of Bruckner as symphonist:
these recordings are expansive, very broadly conceived, and organic both in the
way they appear to grow inevitably from the seeds planted as they begin and in
the sense of organ-like sonorities that come to the fore again and again. In
this live recording of No. 7, Ballot lavishes particular attention on the Adagio, which is longer than the third
and fourth movements together, allowing the music to flow in a way that sounds
both natural and inevitable as the dirgelike elements, never bereft of beauty,
pile upon each other until a genuinely thrilling climax (in which Ballot does
use a cymbal clash, which some conductors omit even though it appears in the
Nowak edition). The symphony as a whole is not spun out to as great a length as
are some of Ballot’s other recordings, but at 73 minutes, this is still a
lengthy reading – which, however, never drags or feels flaccid (another
characteristic of Ballot’s Bruckner). One of the most impressive parts of the
sound is the quietness during rests and in the faintest passages of the
symphony: the lack of sound seems
audible, as if the world, along with the live audience, is holding its breath.
Although not a “definitive” Bruckner Seventh – there is no such thing – this is
a top-notch one that is convincing throughout and that allows Ballot’s unique
approach to the composer to be heard in all its subtlety.
The sound, and in particular the sonic
environment in quiet passages, is also crucial to the success of Osmo Vänskä’s
reading of Mahler’s “Resurrection” symphony in a new BIS release. Unlike
Ballot, Vänskä is an inconsistent conductor of this repertoire – and, in fact,
of this specific symphony, which becomes progressively stronger as it goes on.
Vänskä’s earlier Mahler recordings, of Symphonies Nos. 5 and 6, did not: they
tended to plod and then disintegrate under their own weight, lacking the sort
of overarching conductorial view that makes Ballot’s Bruckner so consistently
successful. Vänskä’s handling of Mahler’s Second seems at first as if it too
will go awry. The striding heroism of the first movement is underwhelming here,
with the movement’s quiet conclusion seeming more a collapse than a funereal
farewell. And the second movement, which Mahler intended as so great a contrast
to the first that he wanted a pause of at least five minutes between them, here
provides little change of mood: instead of lightening, it drags. However,
things improve in the third movement, an orchestral version of the Wunderhorn song about St. Anthony’s
futile sermon to the fishes, which acknowledge the great truth of his words and
then go back to being exactly what they were before. The underlying sardonic
elements do not quite come through here, but the sinuousness of the material is
well-handled; and the instrumental balance, made clear by the very fine SACD
sound, is effective. And then the entire character of the performance changes
when, attacca, the fourth movement
begins, with Sasha Cooke singing Urlicht
with depth, intensity and drama that are deeply stirring and emotionally
trenchant. Suddenly there is genuine pathos in this symphony, a tremendous
sense of the sheer humanity of the music, a feeling of reaching out to
something beyond everyday human experience. It is a remarkable performance of
the symphony’s shortest movement, and one that leads, again attacca, to a finale that starts in such
a gigantic burst of stormy drama that listeners who set the volume a touch too
high for the fourth movement may be physically driven back at the start of the
fifth. Here Vänskä seems really in his element, bringing forth all the fire and
passion that were largely missing from the opening movement, having Mahler’s
grand-scale conception march strongly and stridently along for more than half
the finale until, in a moment that is always thrilling, the chorus enters very,
very quietly with Klopstock’s Aufersteh’n.
The sound here is so good that the entry is, for a moment, questionable: is the
Minnesota Chorale really singing? The answer is yes, and with remarkable
sensitivity and fervor. Cooke has a part in this magnificent peroration too,
and again her voice is so perfectly matched to the material that it overshadows
the otherwise very fine contributions of the chorus and of soprano Ruby Hughes.
Perhaps blessed with or inspired by Cooke’s voice – the religious terms seem
fitting here – Vänskä carries the symphony through to a conclusion that is
every bit as inspiring as that of Mahler’s Eighth, which the ending of the
Second resembles exceptionally closely in this performance. The sonic clarity
helps bring forth the beauty and intricacy of Mahler’s structure and Vänskä’s
interpretation, and the result is a breathtakingly uplifting conclusion to a
performance whose early portion gives little hint of the excellence of its
ending.
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