Dvořák, Elgar and Schumann: Cello Concertos;
Strauss: Don Quixote. Kim Cook, cello; St. Petersburg State Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Arkady Shteinlucht (Elgar, Schumann) and Gerardo Edelstein (Strauss); Bohuslav
Martinů Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Gerardo Edelstein (Dvořák). MSR
Classics. $19.95 (2 CDs).
Richard Danielpour: Talking to Aphrodite; Symphony
for Strings; Kaddish for Violin and Strings. Sarah Shafer, soprano; Maxim Semonov,
French horn; Evgeny Pravilov, violin; Russian String Orchestra conducted by
Misha Rachlevsky. Naxos. $12.99.
Martinů: Memorial to Lidice; Penderecki: Threnody
to the Victims of Hiroshima; Karel Husa: Music for Prague 1968; Philip Koplow:
For the Peace of Cities; How Sweet the Sound. Ravello. $14.99.
Performances of great warmth and
sensitivity make a well-priced MSR Classics two-CD set featuring cellist Kim
Cook into an almost unalloyed pleasure. The works of Dvořák, Elgar, and Richard
Strauss spring, in some ways, from similar sensibilities, and Schumann’s Cello
Concerto can be seen to an extent as a precursor of the others not just
temporally but also in terms of the relationship it establishes between cello
and orchestra. Yet these pieces, all of them technically trenchant and
emotionally exploratory, require cellist and conductor to handle the balance
between solo and ensemble in different ways and to use the wide range and
mellow tone of the cello to elicit differing responses in an audience. These
recordings come from very different times and places – the Dvořák dates to 2001
in the Czech Republic, the three others to 2016 in Russia – but Cook’s
sumptuous tone, adept fingering and unending display of sonic beauty are the
same throughout. The Schumann concerto (written in 1850, the year after he
created five short pieces for cello and piano) is a work of considerable intimacy,
with almost chamber-music-like handling of the cello among the larger ensemble
in its slow movement. Cook’s careful pacing and willingness to share the
spotlight with the orchestra make this a winning performance. The Dvořák is
altogether grander in scale and is structured uniquely: no composer before or
since has created a cello concerto that sounds at all like this one. It was Dvořák’s
last solo concerto, dating to 1894-95. And it shares with Schumann’s work
sections of intimacy (especially between cello and winds) that, in the case of
the Dvořák, stand in stark contrast to the work’s impressive full-orchestra
segments. The highly unusual finale, a rondo that is distinctly marchlike,
finds its progress interrupted for an extended and very beautiful slower
section in which Cook’s lovely lyricism is on full display – after which the
big orchestral wrapup sounds forth to fine effect. The orchestra-solo balance
is also crucial and also well-handled in Don
Quixote (1897), in which Cook (representing the mad would-be knight-errant)
shares the spotlight with violist Anna Vainschtein (playing the main instrument
representing down-to-earth Sancho Panza). Cook and Vainschtein communicate
their respective roles quite well, and hearing them in the context of Strauss’
lush orchestration is a particular pleasure. But here as elsewhere in this
release, it is often the quieter rather than the more-monumental sections that
stay with a listener: Don Quixote’s return to a clear mind just before death,
always a touching moment, is especially well-done here. And the
satire-plus-nostalgia of Strauss seemingly paves the way for the mood of
Elgar’s concerto (1919: his last major work). This is dark and often
distressing music, especially so in the first two movements, and it is only
with the consolatory Adagio that
Elgar conveys a feeling that, despite the horrors of the recently ended Great
War, it is worth going on with life. That feeling is underlined in the finale,
which is certainly not celebratory but which does produce a feeling of
encouragement regarding the future. This is a difficult and subtle piece, and
the way Cook works through its many moods is a measure of her very considerable
skill. She works equally well with the two orchestras and two conductors here –
although the St. Petersburg ensemble is a cut or two above the Bohuslav Martinů
Philharmonic. The presentation of the recording, though, has more rough spots
than are usual in MSR Classics releases. Its back cover lists both orchestras as playing the Dvořák
and omits saying which plays the Strauss, and credits are given for tracks 1-16
on the first CD even though the disc actually has 17 tracks. The information is
correct in the included booklet, but this sloppiness contrasts starkly with the
care and concern that Cook brings to all the music here – and is readily enough
forgivable in light of the quality of the performances.
Nothing on a new Naxos CD of the music of
Richard Danielpour (born 1956) is even close to being as sumptuous as the
cello-focused works played by Cook, but Danielpour has one important thing in
common with the composers who get Cook’s attentive playing: he genuinely wants
to communicate with an audience. This is by no means the case for all
contemporary composers, and Danielpour deserves considerable credit for
producing music that, even when not wholly engaging, nearly always shows an
effort to reach out to listeners. The three works on this new CD express
themselves in different ways – in two cases through the use of soloists, in one
just through a small string orchestra (fewer than 20 players). Talking to Aphrodite is the most recent
piece here, dating to 2016, and the most interestingly scored, being for
soprano, solo French horn and chamber orchestra. The text consists of poems by
Erica Jong – kudos to Naxos for including them in the booklet as well as making
them available online – in which a woman who has given up on life decides,
after a dream in which she meets the goddess Aphrodite, not to surrender to
death after all. The dreamer does not exactly start out as a fan of the goddess
of love: “My lady, Aphrodite, Venus,/ fairest of goddesses,/ you cover the
world/ with your mischief,/ making populations burgeon/ beyond our poor earth’s
power/ to bear.” But by the end of the song cycle, she sees Aphrodite – and
herself – in a different way: “She is the goddess for whom/ the earth continues
to spin –/ in her turning/ all endings end/ and all beginnings/ begin.” The
poetry is on the facile side and the introspection is nothing special – there
is no explanation of what has brought the dreamer so low, so it is difficult to
empathize with her. But Danielpour, moving through music that mostly forces
both the soprano and the horn player to the extremes of their range, eventually
allows both to achieve something approaching a state of grace, or at least
much-reduced anxiety. Sarah Shafer enunciates very well and sings the words
feelingly, and is very well partnered by Maxim Semyonov – who in turn gets fine
backing from the Russian String Orchestra under Misha Rachlevsky. The mood of Talking to Aphrodite continues in the Symphony for Strings, which bears the
title “…For Love Is Strong as Death” and which is in origin a 2014
transcription of Danielpour’s 2009 String
Quartet No. 6. Both this version and the original are much concerned with
saying goodbye, not only to individuals and circumstances but also to life
itself – hence the connection with the Aphrodite texts. But the almost
unrelentingly dark mood of the Symphony
for Strings becomes wearing, and it is only in the central Presto giocoso, a mere seven-minute
movement in a three-movement, 34-minute piece, that Danielpour conveys any
sense of value to going on (and even this movement, although fleet in pacing,
is scarcely bright). To complete the mood of what is on the whole a dark and
gloomy disc, there is Kaddish,
referring to the Jewish prayer for the dead. This is heard in a 2011 version
for violin (Evgeny Pravilov) and string orchestra, adapted by Danielpour from
its original appearance in his Sextet for
Strings. The whole score is supposed to encourage contemplation of death
and life and, eventually, eternal peace; but it takes quite some time to attain
what peacefulness it possesses, and many listeners will likely find this nearly-80-minute-long
CD quite difficult to listen to straight through. Of course, the three pieces
here, all being given world première recordings, were not written to be played
back-to-back, and do not much benefit from being heard that way. Listeners who
can tune into Danielpour’s earnest desire to bring them meaning through
distinctly modern but eminently listenable music will give this release a
(++++) rating, although its thematically dour outlook and somewhat
over-extended handling of the material will make it a (+++) CD for others.
The mood is no less dark – indeed, in many
ways it is darker – on a new (+++) Ravello CD that intends, like the Danielpour
recording, to provide uplift, but that succeeds mainly in showcasing just how
many awful things have happened to just how many people over just how many
years. The actual arrangement of the CD is almost completely reverse
chronological, with a focus on the two works by Philip Koplow (1943-2018). But
the effectiveness of the music and of the disc’s overall theme is clearer if
the CD is heard in pretty much the reverse of the order in which it is
presented. That means starting with Martinů’s Memorial to Lidice (1943), offered in a splendid 2005 recording by
the Philadelphia Orchestra under Christoph Eschenbach. The orchestra’s
exceptionally warm sound, its first-rate brass, its beautifully massed strings,
combine to make this memorial for the victims of the wartime massacre at
Lidice, Czechoslovakia, in 1942, a deeply moving experience. Penderecki’s still-terrifying
Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima
(1960), heard in a 1998 performance by the Polish National Radio Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Antoni Wit, makes it impossible to forget that the
war-ending nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was, even if deemed
necessary and even if it prevented far greater casualties anticipated under
other scenarios, a human tragedy of monumental scope. Next chronologically is Music for Prague 1968 by Karel Husa
(1921-2016), a four-movement suite written in the same year that the Soviet
Union crushed an uprising against its domination – a rebellion still
commemorated as the Prague Spring, but one whose wintry memory is kept very
much alive by Husa’s music. This is a very fine 2008 performance by the Rutgers
Wind Ensemble under William Berz. And then, after hearing these commemorations
of terror and tragedy, it makes sense to listen to Koplow’s two pieces at the
start of the CD. For the Peace of Cities
(1998), heard in a 1999 performance by the Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra under
Paul Nadler, features violinists Jorja Fleezanis and James Braid. It
commemorates the Dayton Peace Agreement of 1995 that ended the Bosnian War, and
it has more lyrical and even pastoral elements than do the works of Martinů,
Penderecki and Husa – yet there is plentiful dissonance here, and the brass
fanfares and other triumphal elements seem to hint at the fact that the Dayton
Accord was, and to some extent remains, controversial. Koplow’s other work here
is How Sweet the Sound, heard in its
2001 world première performance by the Hamilton-Fairfield Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Paul John Stanbery. This is an interestingly conceived work, based
on the hymn “Amazing Grace” and featuring a number of variations on that music,
each in a different key. The idea is to indicate musically that grace, and by
extension peace, can be found in all keys – that is, in all circumstances, by
all people. The message of hope and uplift is a welcome contrast to just about
everything else on a CD that is otherwise downbeat and at times out-and-out
depressing. How Sweet the Sound does
not actually communicate its intended meaning particularly well, but in this
context of memories of horror and turmoil, it is welcome – and is best heard by
listeners as the last of these pieces rather than in its placement second on
the disc.
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