Beethoven: Piano Trios, Op. 1, Nos. 1-3; Op. 70,
Nos. 1 (“Ghost”) and 2; Op. 97 (“Archduke”). Trio Sōra (Pauline Chenais, piano; Clémence
de Forceville, violin; Angèle Legasa, cello). Naïve. $26.99 (3 CDs).
Beethoven: Symphony No. 3; Mahler: Symphony No.
10—Adagio.
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta. Beau Fleuve. $15.
Florent Schmitt: La Tragédie de Salomé; Musique sur
l’eau; Oriane et le Prince d’Amour—Suite; Légende. Susan Platts, mezzo-soprano;
Nikki Chooi, violin; Women’s Choir of Buffalo and Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta. Naxos. $11.99.
Given Beethoven’s seminal position in the
Romantic era, it is all too easy to forget that he really straddled Classical
and Romantic times and formed his reputation based on his handling and
modification of musical forms perfected by such Classical masters as Mozart and
Haydn – to both of whom Beethoven owed a greater debt than he tended to
acknowledge. Beethoven’s piano trios make his provenance particularly clear as
they progress from his first published works (1795) through the well-known
“Archduke” trio (1811). Trio Sōra offers compelling readings of six of the
trios in a new three-CD Naïve release. There are other Beethoven piano trios, for
a total count of 12, including WoO 38, written before the Op. 1 trios, and the
“Gassenhauer” (Op. 11 of 1797), originally for piano, clarinet and cello but
often performed in its alternative version for piano, violin and cello. But the
fact that the Trio Sōra recording makes no attempt to be comprehensive does not
diminish the quality of the project or the effectiveness with which the
performers show Beethoven’s development from his earlier period into his middle
one. The Op. 1 trios are very clearly derived from the Mozart/Haydn era, but
they already show Beethoven’s distinctive voice, and Trio Sōra takes full
advantage of this. The opening of the very first trio is an ascending arpeggio
known in Classical times as a “Mannheim rocket,” and Beethoven’s use of it
affirms his ties to the Mozart/Haydn era while giving Trio Sōra an immediate
opportunity to display the joie de vivre
and tendency toward faster tempos that are evident throughout these
performances. The group takes its oddly spelled name from a Native American
word meaning “a bird that sings as it takes flight,” and seems determined to
live up to that designation from the very first notes here. A single-word
description of the Trio Sōra performances could be “high-spirited,” but at the
same time, Pauline Chenais, Clémence de Forceville and Angèle Legasa do not
hesitate to provide intensity when it is called for, as in Op. 1, No. 3, which
is in the portentous-for-Beethoven key of C minor. Indeed, because Trio Sōra
uses modern instruments, including a full-sounding Steinway piano, there is
ample warmth and depth when called for – sometimes even a bit more than is
called for, although the trios’ slow movements are generally handled without
undue sentimentality. Still, the players seem particularly happy to be engaged
in much of the lighter material in Op. 1, such as the finale of the second, G
major trio. When they move to the Op. 70 trios, their clarity of attack and
articulation serves them particularly well, and their willingness to explore
the emotional depth of the Largo assai ed
espressivo of Op. 70, No. 1 – the movement that gave this work its “Ghost”
nickname – stands them in good stead. The players’ handling of the dynamic
range of the later trios is especially impressive, with focused attention on
the pianissimo sections as well as
the louder ones. The fine blending heard in Op. 70, No. 2, a work unjustifiably
neglected between the “Ghost” and “Archduke,” is particularly impressive and
makes a strong case for the music. The “Archduke” itself, however, is a bit
problematic here. The second-movement Scherzo
is halting rather than flowing, with the players pausing after each four-bar
phrase at the opening just long enough to impede the forward motion. And the
finale’s opening is odd: the Trio Sōra members start the movement hesitantly
and only gradually build up to the designated Allegro moderato main tempo. They never lose their sense of
ensemble, however, and the concluding Presto
material is impressively handled. Still, this “Archduke” is a bit less
convincing than the other works offered here. On the whole, however, Trio Sōra
proves itself a very high-quality ensemble, skilled at interpreting these
Beethoven trios and absolutely first-rate in the give-and-take that the music
requires.
The on-the-cusp-of-Romanticism elements of
Beethoven’s music are the primary reason-for-being of a new Beau Fleuve
recording featuring the composer’s “Eroica” symphony played by the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra under JoAnn Falletta. It is not really possible to
pinpoint a specific work or specific date and say, “the Romantic Era began here,” but Falletta’s choice of
Beethoven’s Third is certainly an arguable point of demarcation if one feels
the need to choose one. The notion underlying the recording, which is dubbed
“The Romantic Age,” is that Beethoven ushered in that emotion-packed era in
music and Mahler escorted it out through the first movement of his Symphony No.
10, with which the Beethoven is here paired. The choice of the Mahler work from
1910 is less defensible than that of the Beethoven – why not Schoenberg’s
String Quartet No. 2 (1908) or Pierrot
Lunaire (1912), or (to move matters much later) Rachmaninoff’s Symphonic Dances (1940)? Falletta did
not offer the two works on this CD under this disc’s title as a concert pairing:
the Beethoven was recorded live in May 2019 and the Mahler in February 2020. So
the juxtaposition seems more expedient than anything else. Still, there are
interesting contrasts between the pieces, and the Buffalo Philharmonic plays
them both with strength and intensity – and very fine string sound, which is
especially crucial in the Mahler. Falletta starts the “Eroica” less than
decisively in its first two chords, but quickly rights matters with a well-paced
first movement (a bit on the fast side) whose propulsiveness is convincing. The
omission of the exposition repeat is, however, unconscionable and indefensible.
The second movement is stately rather than emphatically funereal, sad rather
than tragic – and lightened to a greater-than-usual extent by its woodwind
elements and some of the string figurations. This makes the “Eroica” less
definitively Romantic than its inclusion on this disc would indicate, but it
fits the movement well and effectively sets up the final two movements, which
can sometimes seem tacked-on after the very expansive first two. The light and
speedy opening of the third movement works well in Falletta’s interpretation,
and the strings play enthusiastically. The horn entry in the trio slows matters
down a bit, but the horns’ very fine hunting-call sound is most welcome. The
third movement ends speedily and moves attacca
into a finale that is notable for its bounce and rhythmic vitality, and that
concludes with genuine panache. All in all, this is a well-integrated,
well-thought-through performance that successfully presents the symphony as a
whole instead of placing the majority of emphasis on the first two movements.
It would be interesting to hear whether Falletta would handle Mahler’s Tenth in
an analogous way: although not completely orchestrated, the work was
essentially finished at the composer’s death and has been offered as a complete
symphony in many versions. This makes it much less reasonable to extract its
first movement, one of the two left 100% complete (the third movement being the
other), and to play it as a standalone work, as Falletta chooses to do. The
performance itself is fine: the straining against tonality of the music comes
through as clearly as does its sense of constant yearning, and the eerie
effects that Mahler coaxes from the orchestra are played with understanding. Mahler
habitually treated his large orchestras as extended chamber groups, requiring
sections, parts of sections, or individual players to emerge from the whole
ensemble and then fall back into it. Falletta and the Buffalo musicians handle
this aspect of the music quite well. The decision to play only this single
Mahler movement is a questionable one, and the label “The Romantic Era” for
this disc is more a matter of marketing than musicianship, but the performances
here are worthy, and there is insight to be had in hearing these very different
composers’ works in close proximity.
Beethoven’s influence extended to and past Mahler, but the Germanic style that he epitomized was not the only prominent one in the Romantic era and afterwards. Florent Schmitt (1870-1958) represents a different approach, a French style along the lines of Fauré and Massenet, with both of whom Schmitt studied. It is interesting to contrast the balletic elements of Beethoven’s Third, whose finale derives from a theme the composer used earlier in The Creatures of Prometheus, with the ballet-originating sounds in the Schmitt works that are heard on a Falletta/Buffalo Philharmonic release for Naxos. Schmitt was primarily an impressionistic composer, as is evident in all four pieces on this disc. La Tragédie de Salomé, a two-part symphonic poem that dates to 1910 and started out as a ballet, unusually includes, in the second part, a mezzo-soprano voice. Less intense, impassioned and frenetic than Richard Strauss’ one-act opera of five years earlier, Schmitt’s work opts more for Oriental flavor and an overall feeling of the exotic than for Strauss’ mixture of seductiveness and murderous intent. Schmitt’s music is very well performed by the orchestra, and as on the Beethoven/Mahler disc, the ensemble’s fine string section does a first-rate job of tone painting, while Susan Platts handles the vocal elements with aplomb. Platts is also heard in the 1898 voice-and-orchestra version of the brief Musique sur l’eau, which lacks the sweep and atmosphere of Debussy’s La mer (1903-05) but has a pleasant flow of its own. Schmitt’s music tends to pale by comparison with that of better-known composers, but it stands up well when heard on its own, without preconceptions. On that basis, the suite from Oriane et le Prince d’Amour is finely colored, nicely orchestrated, and offers effective contrasts among its sections. It is also clearly late-Romantic in sound despite dating to 1934-37 – further evidence, if any were needed, that the door to the Romantic era did not close after Mahler’s Tenth. The Schmitt CD concludes with a work from 1918, the violin-and-orchestra version of Légende, a piece originally featuring solo saxophone and perhaps more interesting in that guise. Nikki Chooi plays it well and with feeling, but it has a rather ordinary and undistinguished sound to it. Falletta is a strong advocate for Schmitt’s music, and certainly Schmitt deserves better than the obscurity into which he has fallen. But the reality is that although he was a skilled craftsman, he was not, on the basis of the works heard on this (+++) CD, especially innovative: most of these pieces sound like somewhat warmed-over versions of music by composers with an equal sense of style but a greater portion of creativity and inventiveness.
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