Offenbach: Excerpts from “Les trois baisers du
diable,” “Robinson Crusoé,” “Le voyage dans la lune,” “Fantasio,” “Le Roi
Carotte,” “Les Fées du Rhin,” “Barkouf,” “La Haine,” and “Orphée aux enfers.” Leipziger
Symphonieorchester conducted by Nicolas Krüger. Genuin. $18.99.
Kete: Piano Music of Africa and the African
Diaspora.
William Chapman Nyaho, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Jacques Offenbach is scarcely thought of
as a miniaturist, having created 100-some stage works in his life, ranging in
length from an hour or so to several hours. But in the manner of his
construction of those works, Offenbach did indeed specialize in miniatures: the
arias, choruses, entr’actes and other component parts of his productions are
mostly brief and self-contained. This, among other things, made it easier for
Offenbach to recycle components of unsuccessful productions, give them new
words or a new dramatic purpose, and use them in entirely different ways. He
was a showman and a businessman above all, enormously influential musically on
composers from Suppé to Sullivan but allowing no head-in-the-clouds notions
about musicality to interfere with his determination to make a good living by
entertaining the Parisian populace. Accidents of history undermined his
ambitions – in particular, France’s defeat by Prussia in the Franco-Prussian War
(1870-71), which made Offenbach persona
non grata because he was German by birth (his first name was originally
Jakob). It is to Offenbach’s credit that he rebuilt his career in Paris, to an
extent, despite the military debacle; but there are distinct differences in
both form and substance between his prewar and postwar works. One thing they
all have in common, though, is their remarkable tunefulness and their approach
of stringing together many little pieces to make an entirety greater than the
sum of its parts. Offenbach’s musical imagination was so fertile, his focus on
entertainment so precise, that there are tremendous numbers of almost unknown
pieces from his stage works that are every bit as delightful to hear as the
far-better-known material from La Belle
Hélène, La Vie Parisienne, Les Contes d’Hoffman, Barbe-bleue, La
Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein, and others. Several of the works excerpted
for a new Genuin CD are almost completely unknown today, but were very
significant (for better or worse) in Offenbach’s life as composer and
impresario – the early Les trois baisers
du diable, for instance, and the late and ill-fated La Haine (“Hatred”), whose very costly production was largely
responsible for driving the composer into bankruptcy. From a strictly musical
standpoint, the biographical elements underlying the various works scarcely
matter – except when it comes to Orphée
aux enfers, whose overture is the only piece here likely to be familiar
(indeed, hyper-familiar) to listeners. What is interesting here is that the
overture is not by Offenbach – and does not appear in either of the two primary
versions of the score (1858 and 1874). It was assembled by Carl Binder
(1816-1860) for the opera’s first production in Vienna, in 1860. The fact that
this collection of tunes from the opera fits together so well and has become
overwhelmingly popular even though Offenbach did not himself assemble the
material shows just how lasting and effective are the miniature components of
his stage productions. The Leipziger Symphonieorchester under Nicolas Krüger
gives this overture a rousing performance that fully justifies the work’s
popularity. But it is the nearly unknown jewels, whether precious or
semi-precious, that are the main attraction of the CD: the overtures to Les trois baisers du diable, Le voyage dans
la lune, and Les Fées du Rhin;
entr’actes from Robinson Crusoé, Fantasio
(one each from Acts II and III), Le Roi
Carotte and Barkouf; the
introduction to Act I of Fantasio;
the Marche Religieuse from La Haine, which was written as theater
music rather than as opera or operetta; and the introduction and ballet/valse
from Le Roi Carotte, which includes
some marvelous music recycling from the ballet Le Papillon. The various pieces are arranged on the disc in no
particular order, but it does not really matter: everything here has its own
pleasures, and everything showcases Offenbach’s enormous skill at creating
sparkling and memorable melodies that served their many and various purposes
well – even when repurposed because a particular work turned out to be less
than successful.
The 32 little piano works played by
William Chapman Nyaho on a new MSR Classics release are of varying interest and
quality, being united not by the people who composed them but by the composers’
African roots. This (+++) CD is therefore for listeners who want to hear a
degree of “African-ness” in music or to celebrate composers based on their ethnicity.
Thus, the focus is less on the music itself than on its background and
biographical connections – resulting in an overall presentation that is on the
uneven side. The disc’s title is intended to reflect its purpose: “kete” refers
both to a specific African dance form and to a particular woven fabric. Only a
few composers represented here may be familiar to a non-specialist audience: perhaps
Ulysses Kay, Florence Price, and Laurindo Almeida (who, however, is known for bossa nova, not for anything
particularly African). Others here are Isak Roux, Hale Smith, Nkeiru Okoye,
Robert Kwami, Halim El-Dabh, Valerie Capers, André Bagambula Vindu, Kwabena
Nketia, Christian Onyeji, Robert Nathaniel Dett, Joshua Uzoigwe, Wallace
Cheatham, Amadeo Roldán y Gardes, John Wesley Work III, Akin Euba, Alain-Pierre
Pradel, and Eleanor Alberga. The miniatures heard here range in length from 35
seconds to four-and-a-half minutes. They are mostly consonant, mostly rather
simple to perform, and mostly reflective of their titles: Kay’s Tender Thought is tender, for example,
and Okoye’s Dusk is crepuscular,
while Smith’s Off-Beat Story uses
off-beats and Price’s Ticklin’ Toes
does have the pianist tickle the keys (metaphorically). Among the other pieces,
Capers’ Sweet Mister Jelly Roll is
reminiscent of Scott Joplin, Roux’ Lullaby
is suitably soporific, Uzoigwe’s Nigerian
Dance No. 1 is rhythmically interesting, Work’s At a Certain Church is bell-like and hymnlike; and so on. It is
easy to find something to enjoy on this disc, and easy to bypass or simply
endure one less-enjoyable short piece in order to get to the next, hopefully
more-likable one. It is less easy to discern any particular theme or
overarching purpose to the material beyond that of ethnic ancestry: nothing
here is profound or revelatory, and little is interesting enough to be likely
to stay with listeners after Nyaho’s recital is over – unless those listeners
are themselves pianists seeking some off-the-beaten-path short pieces that are
nicely constructed even if they are, all in all, not particularly meaningful.
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