Bruckner:
Symphony No. 8, 1890 version, transcribed for organ by Eberhard Klotz; Fanfare
“Ecce sacerdos magnus” | Motet WAB 13, transcribed for organ by Hansjörg
Albrecht; Thomas Daniel Schlee: “In Nomine” | Window on Bruckner’s 8th
Symphony. Hansjörg Albrecht, organ.
Oehms. $23.99 (2 CDs).
Heinrich
Marschner: Overtures and Stage Music, Volume 2. Hradec Králové Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by
Dario Salvi. Naxos. $13.99.
It is a fair bet that 2024, the bicentennial of Bruckner’s birth, will
be less fraught with worldwide dislocation and near-panic than the 250th
anniversary of Beethoven’s birth, for which celebrations and acknowledgments
were largely derailed by the depredations of the COVID-19 pandemic. The
Bruckner bicentennial will surely include trouble spots and doom-laden
predictions aplenty, those being a feature of every year – but one can at least
hope that no worldwide catastrophe akin to the pandemic of 2020 will undermine
the many plans to honor Bruckner. A great number of those plans have been in
the making for years, including the quixotic but fascinating releases on Oehms
of organ transcriptions of Bruckner’s symphonies, performed with tremendous
stylistic attentiveness by Hansjörg Albrecht. The latest of them, featuring the
monumental Eighth Symphony that was Bruckner’s final completed work in the
form, is in fact climactic in its expansiveness and its confirmation that these
recordings, although perhaps objectively wrong-headed, can and do shed enormous
light on the “Bruckner sound” and the ability of the organ to elucidate
elements of the symphonies that do not always come through with equal clarity
when the works are played, as intended, by an orchestra. Like other recordings
in this fascinating series, this one includes a couple of musical appetizers
before getting to the symphonic main course. The first is Albrecht’s own organ
transcription of Bruckner’s Fanfare “Ecce
sacerdos magnus” | Motet WAB 13, originally written for choir, three trombones
and organ – a very interesting work in its own right, and one whose solemnity
and sense of anticipation translate well to the organ in Albrecht’s version.
Next is the latest “Bruckner Window”: these symphonies-on-the-organ CDs all
feature contemporary composers’ tributes to or musical comments on Bruckner.
The one by Thomas Daniel Schlee (born 1957) is extended – 12 minutes long – and
structurally ties interestingly to the finale of Bruckner’s Eighth in its
rhythms and counterpoint. It is more a fantasy on the symphony than an introduction to it, but it serves effectively as a modern commentary on some
elements of Bruckner’s music. And then Albrecht begins a very broadly
conceived, spacious and elegant performance of the symphony itself, stretching
the work out to a full 92 minutes – one of the longest modern recordings of
this symphony. Yet if the pacing is deliberate, it is never plodding: Albrecht
has clearly thought in considerable depth about the intricacies of this score,
and Eberhard Klotz’s transcription does a truly excellent job of highlighting
not only the main thematic groups but also the middle voices and subsidiary
elements. In fact, although it might seem that performing this symphony on a
single instrument, even a grand single
instrument, would significantly compromise Bruckner’s sense of orchestral
coloration and his attentiveness to detail within the work’s very broad canvas.
Surprisingly, though, the combination of Klotz’s work and Albrecht’s
performance produces a feeling of sonic balance among sections (thanks to
Albrecht’s highly skillful selection of registrations); and while combinations
of and contrasts among strings, winds and brass are inevitably missing, the
overall sound world of the symphony comes through with considerable clarity.
Klotz arranged the second (1890) version of the symphony, which has tended to
fall out of favor in recent years as more conductors have gravitated to the
original version of 1887. Given the inauthenticity of any organ transcription
of a Bruckner symphony, this is less important than it might otherwise be: what
matters here is that Albrecht fully explores the sprawling majesty of the work
– the 32-minute Adagio is simply
outstanding – and that Klotz shows great understanding of Bruckner’s music and,
as a result, creates a transcription that, strictly on its own terms (which are
not exactly Bruckner’s), is highly convincing.
Dario Salvi’s exploration of the stage music of Heinrich August Marschner (1795-1861) has many points of interest as well, but the second volume in this Naxos series is a (+++) release simply because – like the first disc led by Salvi – the music itself is of less interest and less consequence than the conceptualization of a series highlighting it. Marschner was the most important German opera composer between Weber and Wagner, and a significant influence on the latter, whose first opera, Die Feen, is essentially Wagner’s “take” on the Marschner operatic world. Marschner’s use of melodrama, his creation of powerful antiheroic central characters, his expansion of the lower range of the orchestra, and his development of supernatural protagonists with mortal failings, all influenced Wagner to a considerable degree; and two Marschner operas – Der Vampyr and Hans Heiling – remain impressive in their own right. But Salvi’s main interest in this recording, as in the previous one, is to unearth Marschner works that are thoroughly unfamiliar: everything in Volume 2 is a world première recording. Everything is also, unfortunately, rather prosaic, more so than the best of Marschner’s stage music. The four works represented on this CD cover a 30-year period: Prinz Friedrich von Homburg dates to 1821, Klänge aus Osten to 1842, Kaiser Adolph von Nassau to 1845, and Austin to 1850-51. The specific selections heard here are nicely enough played by the Hradec Králové Philharmonic Orchestra (although the Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice, used for the prior CD, is a somewhat more-polished ensemble); but there simply is not much musical meat to these small selections. From Prinz Friedrich von Homburg, for example, Salvi offers the four entr’actes and the concluding Schluss Symphonie, while the more-extended pieces from Kaiser Adolph von Nassau and Austin are ballets that are scarcely germane to the works’ action or their primary focuses. The most-interesting piece here is the overture to Klänge aus Osten – the only music Salvi offers from that work, which is a dramatic cantata rather than an opera. Occasional hints of Marschner’s innovations do appear in some of the pieces here: for instance, his use of and contrast between lower strings and brass is a recurrent element that produces some effective moments. As a whole, though, the music heard on this release is rather thin gruel – interesting because it has not previously been recorded, but in no way indicative of the importance of Marschner as a composer for the stage and an influence on Wagner and others. Hopefully there will be more-interesting Marschner to come as this series progresses.
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