Tchaikovsky:
Symphony No. 5; Erwin Schulhoff: Five Pieces for String Quartet—arranged for
orchestra by Manfred Honeck and Tomáš Ille. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra conducted by Manfred Honeck. Reference
Recordings. $19.98 (SACD).
Richard
Stöhr: Orchestral Music, Volume One—Concert im alten Stil for Strings, Piano
and Percussion; Suite No. 2 for String Orchestra. Agnieszka Kopacka-Aleksandrowicz, piano; Sinfonia
Varsovia conducted by Ian Hobson. Toccata Classics. $18.99.
Richard
Stöhr: Orchestral Music, Volume 2—Suite No. 1 for String Orchestra; Symphony
No. 1. Sinfonia Varsovia conducted by
Ian Hobson. Toccata Classics. $18.99.
The verbiage associated with classical CDs tends to get short shrift
nowadays, often justifiably. In the societal rush to eliminate physical storage
of music and turn all listening experiences into virtual ones, mostly on
devices with tiny and tinny speakers barely suitable for much beyond the
consistent volume and constant similarity of rhythm of popular music, actual
discussions of the works being performed have become truncated even when such
commentary exists at all. Some CD releases no longer include it, or include
barely anything worthwhile, while even those that try to present some
information beyond the trivial fall far short of what used to be available on
the backs of vinyl albums and in the large-format, often elaborately produced
enclosures (not to mention opera libretti) that came with many records. There
are occasional welcome exceptions to this state of affairs, though, and
releases featuring conductor Manfred Honeck are among them. Honeck is an
exceptionally thoughtful conductor who also happens to be a very good writer,
and who genuinely and generously shares many details of his thinking about
music in booklets such as the one enclosed with the new Reference Recordings
SACD featuring music by Tchaikovsky and Erwin Schulhoff. Honeck offers 16 pages
of notes on the works heard on this disc, delving into elements of his
performance practices in so much detail that he repeatedly cites specific times
within the performances at which listeners can hear how his thoughts translate
into interpretation. It is disheartening, though, to realize that for those who
simply listen to these performances without absorbing Honeck’s thinking about
them, the readings fall somewhat short – especially that of the Tchaikovsky,
which is a combination of the revelatory and the disappointing.
What happens in Honeck’s handling of this symphony involves the classic debate
about how best to make a composer’s desired points – by close adherence to the
score or by subtle-to-not-so-subtle modifications of it. Honeck chooses the
latter approach, delivering a performance pervaded by rubato that creates a kind of emotional stuttering that is at odds
with the flowing emotionalism so central to Tchaikovsky’s work. The first
movement has a broad slowdown just before the five-minute mark, a speedup
around half a minute later, then a slowdown again: this sort of accentuation of
ebb and flow is well-intentioned and well-argued in Honeck’s writing, but the
movement’s impact would be present (and indeed stronger) without the overdone
tempo changes. This movement speeds up again at about 10 minutes and by 12
minutes is really too fast. The playing is excellent – highly responsive – but
the approach is musically
unconvincing. The second movement is exceptionally beautiful but stretched to
the breaking point of sentimentality, and the gorgeous clarinet passage at the
end sounds disconnected from the rest. The third movement, very dancelike and
generally well-paced, has a slowdown near the end that changes its character,
and the pacing is quite slow for the final two chords. The finale features
highly emphatic timpani throughout, but again there are pacing issues: the
music is much faster at the seven-minute mark and has by then become episodic.
This is genuinely elegant playing, but the disconnected tempo arrangement is
distracting. The symphony actually sounds as if it ends with the finale’s full
stop after nine-and-a-half minutes. Then comes a conclusion that is undeniably
exciting – but the slowdown of the final four chords is quite unnecessary.
The piece by Erwin Schulhoff (1894-1942) fares better, surely thanks to
the brevity of its five component parts and to Honeck’s admirably dedicated
work on the arrangement for full orchestra. This piece has a generally Romantic
sensibility but uses 20th-century harmonic language, and its
orchestration here is very skillful at highlighting the parodistic intent with
which Schulhoff offers interpretations of (or homages to) five dance forms.
Schulhoff’s playfulness and piquancy make for a strong contrast to
Tchaikovsky’s sincerity and heart-on-sleeve emotionalism – although there is
really no reason for the pairing of the two specific works on this disc, and
Honeck, in all his commentary, never explains why they are offered together.
Schulhoff’s piece is rather dry, on the edge of sarcasm. Among other features,
the Czech polka is very hectic and brassy, with percussion particularly
well-used; the violin in the fourth movement, which is ostensibly a tango, is
more Gypsy-like in character; and the brass outbursts and overall frantic pace
of the final tarantella are very good, with the use of tam-tam particularly
felicitous. Honeck’s understanding of and commitment to both Schulhoff and
Tchaikovsky are considerable, and his writing about both is admirable – and a
sign of how well essays on music can be incorporated into and reflected in
physical recordings. But there is also a cautionary tale here: where the
Tchaikovsky is concerned, the writing proves more convincing and satisfying
than the music.
The scholarly written material is even more extensive in the booklets
for two Toccata Classics releases featuring the music of Richard Stöhr
(1874-1967), a famed Austrian academic and composer who fled the 1938 Anschluss and lived out his life in
straitened circumstances in the United States. Highly regarded as a pedagogue
(he taught Leonard Bernstein, Rudolf Serkin, and many, many others), he was
well-thought-of as a composer in Austria but became thoroughly obscure after
emigrating: all four pieces on these two CDs are world première recordings.
Putting Stöhr and his music into perspective are two unusually thick booklets,
a 24-page one for the first volume and a 28-page one for the second, both
consisting primarily of very extended and very amply footnoted essays by music
historian William Melton. Unlike Honeck’s writing, which deals with the intricacies
of musical interpretation and certainly lays to rest any notion that all a
conductor does is stand in front of the orchestra and wave a stick, Melton’s articles
are both biographical and musically explanatory – very illuminating regarding a
little-known musical figure, but dealing not at all with the niceties of
actually playing Stöhr’s music. That is left to Sinfonia Varsovia under Ian
Hobson – and here as in the Honeck recording, there is a disconnect between the
fascinations of the written material and the effects of the music itself. Stöhr,
it turns out, produced workmanlike and well-crafted orchestral pieces that are
far from compelling when heard without specific reference to the written
material explaining their provenance. Stöhr was proudly and avowedly an
old-fashioned Romantic in orientation, but much of his harmonic language in the
first volume of these two discs is of the 20th century – at least in
this regard, his music is somewhat akin to Schulhoff’s. Concert im alten Stil is not really in “old style,” despite its
title, although there is nothing particularly “modern” and acerbic about it
either – not even in the piano at the start of the third-movement Burleske. The piece, which dates to
1937, is relentlessly upbeat, but it sounds more forced than free-flowing – a
characteristic of all the music on these two discs. Suite No. 2 dates to Stöhr’s American period (1947), and it starts
seriously, as befits a work in A minor. But it lacks emotional connection and
seems a bit like an academic exercise – witness an Adagio con espressione that is indeed expressive but is never
really heartfelt.
The second Stöhr volume features earlier and somewhat-more-successful works. The flow of Suite No. 1, which has only three movements, is somewhat better than that of the later, five-movement work. The first movement is bright; the second, which is as long as the first and third put together, is broad and emotionally expressive, if perhaps a bit overextended; and the third is a well-constructed fugue that is generally upbeat and concludes with a suitably emphatic coda. Suite No. 1 dates to 1908-09, the same period as the first of Stöhr’s seven symphonies (1909). This is a substantial work, larger and weightier in some ways than Tchaikovsky’s Fifth, if nowhere near as melodic. Stöhr’s first movement at one point actually sounds a lot like Tchaikovsky’s Manfred Symphony. The opening movement is large and dramatic, but it is somewhat gestural, as if its parts are carefully assembled rather than connected viscerally/emotionally. Next is a Scherzo featuring strong use of percussion. It is fanfare-like, even celebratory, and actually sounds more like a finale than a middle movement – but it seems overextended by the time the Trio appears and develops. The movement as a whole is on the grandiose side – and, tellingly from the point of view of the symphony’s design and impact, it is twice as long as the slow movement that comes next. That movement is marked Andante religioso, a designation that implies a high degree of seriousness that the movement does not really deliver despite the inclusion of an organ – instrumentally a clever idea that does not seem driven by any particular necessity of emotional expression. This movement speeds up significantly three-fourths of the way through, as if Stöhr really has little patience with slow or even moderately slow material, much less anything "religioso." The movement does not so much end as drift away. The symphony’s finale is somewhat disconnected and episodic – again, there are suitable finale-like gestures throughout, but no sense of inevitability or necessity to its structure. The message is that a finale is needed, so here is one! Halfway through, as the brass surges repeatedly, the whole thing becomes somewhat tiresome – but a bit later, there is a somewhat Brucknerian pause and appearance of different thematic material that, despite some repetitiveness, works better. As occurs near the end of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth, this finale has a full stop near the end – here, just 90 seconds before the conclusion – after which the brass-plus-timpani material is emphatic but rather obvious, before a speed-up that rushes to a conclusion that is going to be formulaic until it suddenly drops a long way toward silence and seems about to end quietly until its final loud chord. There are many individually clever moments in the symphony, but as a totality it is far from convincing. And just as Honeck’s well-reasoned, well-written discussion of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth does not translate to a musically compelling performance of the symphony, so Melton’s very learned and highly informative essays on Stöhr and his music – for all their considerable value – do not make the case for Stöhr as a significant composer as well as Hobson and Sinfonia Varsovia would make it if the music itself had as much depth as the writing about it.
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