Spohr: Clarinet Concertos Nos. 1-4. Karl Leister, clarinet;
Radio-Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart conducted by Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos.
Orfeo. $14.99 (2 CDs).
Idil
Biret Concerto Edition, Volumes 7 and 8: Mozart—Piano
Concertos Nos. 15, 24, 25 and 27. Idil Biret, piano; London Mozart Players and
Worthing Symphony Orchestra conducted by John Gibbons. IBA. $19.99 (2 CDs).
John Hilliard: 2 Preludes, 3 Fugues and 1 Postlude;
Florence Price: Sonata in E minor; Conlon Nancarrow: Tango?; Steven Bryant:
RedLine.
Cole Burger, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
The saying is that good things – well, bad
things, too – come in threes. But sometimes good things come in fours, as with
Louis Spohr’s four clarinet concertos, which are among his few works that have
remained more or less enduringly popular. Spohr’s fame in his lifetime and
near-total obscurity afterwards somewhat parallel the situation of Hummel, who,
like Spohr, bestrode the Classical and Romantic eras and seemed in hindsight
not to belong particularly clearly to either. But also like Hummel, Spohr has
been somewhat rediscovered in recent years, and for good reason: he not only
wrote some excellent music but also was responsible for some genuine advances
in the field – for example, Spohr invented the violin chinrest. Spohr’s musical
output was responsible for advances of its own: he wrote his clarinet concertos
for noted virtuoso Johann Simon Hermstedt, and in his first concerto Spohr
deliberately wrote a solo part that went beyond the physical limits of the
clarinet. Undaunted, Hermstedt had a new, extended-range clarinet built so he
could play Spohr’s music – and it is this clarinet design that is still in use
today. Yet Spohr was not merely “fooling around” with Hermstedt any more than
Mozart was merely “fooling around” when writing his horn concertos for Joseph
Leutgeb: Spohr genuinely wanted his concertos to display the soloist’s
technical skill while offering beauty and lyricism to the audience. All four of
the concertos do exactly that, often accentuating the clarinet’s lower range
and inviting the audience’s emotional involvement through extensive use of
minor keys: only the second concerto is in the major (E-flat), while No. 1 is
in C minor, No. 3 in F minor, and No. 4 in E minor. Karl Leister has a smooth,
sumptuous clarinet tone that fits this music very well indeed, and the
Radio-Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart is conducted with assurance and a nicely
complementary warmth by Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos on a new Orfeo two-CD set.
This is not actually “new” in terms of the recording date, though: the
performances date all the way back to 1983, in the early days of all-digital
recording, and the sound is not quite as rich and full-bodied as later digital
sound was to become. But the excellence of the interpretations more than makes
up for the minor inadequacies of the audio reproduction, which is quite fine
even though it is not at the highest modern quality level.
The sound is first-rate and the
performances much more recent in Idil Biret’s new recording of four Mozart
piano concertos on the IBA (Idil Biret Archive) label. But something
significantly misfires in these readings, despite Biret’s longstanding
reputation as a fine Mozart interpreter. Born in 1941, Biret was 74 when she made
this recording of Concertos Nos. 15 and 24, and 77 when she recorded Nos. 25
and 27. Her pianistic abilities certainly show no signs of flagging – indeed, in
these live recordings she still turns a phrase with considerable elegance, and
manages both lightness and drama with consummate skill. But her pacing of these
concertos, and the accompaniment accorded by the orchestras under John Gibbons,
ranges from being slightly “off” to being downright misconceived. The very
opening of No. 15 stops and starts so oddly that it almost sounds as if the
orchestra was not quite ready to start playing at the beginning of the concert
– but that proves untrue, since the first movement’s recapitulation is just as
hesitant and prissy as the exposition. And in this movement, Biret presents a
cadenza of her own – which, surprisingly, is not at all in keeping with
Mozart’s style in general or the style of this movement in particular. The
concerto’s second and third movements are considerably better, but the
unfortunate effects of the first movement pull down the overall quality of the
performance. Something similar happens in No. 24, whose first movement is slow
almost to the point of dragging. Perhaps the intent here is to add even more
gravitas to this magnificent minor-key concerto, but what actually happens is
that the first movement sounds earthbound and hidebound – stodgy rather than
strong. Again, the second and third movements fare much better, but the overall
effect is subpar. The best performance here is of Concerto No. 25, which moves
with a stately grace befitting its thematic material and C major key. The
pacing is, again, on the slow side, but not to an uncomfortable degree here,
especially since the first movement is marked Allegro maestoso. This is a concerto that is almost in updated galant style, and both Biret and Gibbons
seem quite comfortable in allowing it to proceed with considerable elegance. If
only all the concertos recorded here were at this level! But matters are again
less than they could be in No. 27, Mozart’s last piano concerto – whose opening
movement yet again is made a bit ponderous, despite this concerto’s lighter
scoring. The listless pacing is especially noticeable at the first movement’s
first piano entry, but in fact the entire concerto, not just the first
movement, is quite slow, a sort of Mozart in molasses. The latter part of the
final Rondo, notably, is really very
slow indeed, sapped of strength and listless. Biret’s very fine playing never,
in any of these four concertos, achieves the sparkling quality of which she is
capable and which she has shown elsewhere in Mozart. As a result, this is a
(+++) release, and even that will seem a tad high to listeners who have heard
these wonderful works played with considerably more verve than Biret and Gibbons
offer here.
The foursome of composers whose piano
works appear on a new (+++) MSR Classics CD have Arkansas in common: all are
from that state. But there is little that they otherwise share in terms of the
music performed by Cole Burger. There are two substantial pieces here, by John
Hilliard and Florence Price, and two much shorter and more-modest ones, by
Conlon Nancarrow and Steven Bryant. Three works are from the 20th
century: Price’s dates to 1932, Nancarrow’s to 1983, and Bryant’s to 1999.
Hilliard’s 2 Preludes, 3 Fugues and 1
Postlude is the most-recent piece, created in 2010-13. And it is quite
enjoyable for listeners who want to hear a contemporary composer’s way with
Baroque forms – which Hilliard handles skillfully and with quite a few modern
harmonic touches. The six pieces bear dedications somewhat reflective of their
content: for example, the third, a mere 30-second Prelude on G, is marked, “Happy Birthday, Arnold Schoenberg!” And
the last and longest piece, the Postlude
on A, is “dedicated to the people of Okinawa, Japan.” Burger throws himself
into the music with enthusiasm, and has a good sense of the not-too-rigid,
occasionally somewhat tongue-in-cheek approach that Hilliard brings to the
formal aspects of these well-constructed works. Price’s sonata appears next on
the disc and takes itself considerably more seriously in every way. Avowedly
and unashamedly Romantic in style and approach, the sonata is traditionally
structured with an expansive first movement, a rather short and somewhat
intermezzo-like Andante, and an
outgoing final Scherzo (Allegro). It
is not a very tightly knit piece, leaning more toward expressive pianism than
toward elegance of construction. Indeed, in some ways, especially in the first
movement, it has more the character of a fantasia than that of a sonata. It
does have many beauties, including some distinctly folklike elements, and calls
for just the sort of sensitive, involved interpretation that Burger accords it.
The sonata stands in distinct contrast to Nancarrow’s Tango? The question mark is quite deliberate: this
two-and-a-half-minute piece is in no way danceable and is also quite different
from the concert-hall tangos of Ástor Piazzolla. It is packed with notes, so
many that at times it sounds as if the pianist needs three hands to encompass
all of them; and in its atonality and ever-changing rhythms, the piece has
something of the character of a musical joke, late-20th-century
style. Bryant’s RedLine, which
concludes this disc (and which also exists in later versions for wind ensemble,
saxophone ensemble, and percussion quartet), is overtly jazzy and, in the main,
enthusiastic. The concept, as the title indicates, is to push the piano (and
instruments in the other versions) to their limits, and there is certainly
plenty of energy in Burger’s playing, although the piece itself has a feeling
of much ado about not very much. Still, it makes a pleasant enough conclusion
to an interesting CD that shows, if nothing else, that composers from Arkansas
are as varied in their interests and approaches as are other composers united
only by geography.
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