Tchaikovsky:
Symphonies Nos. 1-6; Manfred Symphony; Original version of Symphony No. 2’s first movement; Capriccio
Italien; Coronation March; Francesca da Rimini; Romeo and Juliet
Fantasy-Overture; Marche Slave. Russian
National Orchestra conducted by Mikhail Pletnev. Brilliant Classics. $42.99 (7
CDs).
This is a very peculiar release indeed – or rather a very peculiar
re-release. The seven-CD Brilliant Classics Tchaikovsky cycle led by Mikhail
Pletnev originally appeared as a boxed set of Pentatone SACDs in 2015;
individual symphonies had previously been released between 2011 and 2014. The
complete set consists of readings from 2010 and 2011, except that the Manfred Symphony was recorded in 2013.
And this grouping is about as quirkily personal a set of interpretations of
Tchaikovsky’s symphonic oeuvre as any
listener is likely to hear.
Pletnev conducts an outstanding ensemble: the Russian National
Orchestra, which Pletnev founded in 1990, vaulted rapidly to the top ranks of
ensembles in Russia, placing it very high in the European and worldwide
orchestral pantheon. Indeed, the orchestra’s first recording, of Tchaikovsky’s
Sixth, was one of the work’s best recorded performances ever, so beautifully
articulated, perfectly played and nuanced in interpretation that a full
Tchaikovsky cycle at the same level would have been one for the ages.
Unfortunately, that is not this grouping, which is decidedly uneven. Although
the orchestral playing is uniformly excellent, many of Pletnev’s
interpretations are just too unfocused to be fully convincing.
Pletnev’s ideas can be simply bizarre. For example, he changes tempo
repeatedly and confusingly in the four-minute slow introduction to the first
movement of Symphony No. 1 – but wait! There
is no slow introduction to this movement. Pletnev simply invents one, turning the start of this Allegro tranquillo opening into
something sleepy and dreamlike, likely because Tchaikovsky called the movement
“Dreams [or Daydreams] of a Winter Journey.” Then Pletnev leads the next
section of the movement at such a breakneck pace that a lesser orchestra would
have had real difficulty avoiding sloppiness. Later in the movement, we get
further speedups and slowdowns placed here and there, producing a disjointed,
mixed-up performance. In the lovely second movement, Pletnev again starts
slowly, speeds up (but thankfully not so much), and manages to bring out the cantabile in the Adagio cantabile ma non tanto tempo designation only because of the
great warmth and beauty of the orchestra’s strings. At the end of the movement,
though, Pletnev slows down the proceedings so much that listeners may find
themselves nodding off: it is the orchestra that makes this recording worth
hearing, not the conductor’s view of the music. The much-better third and
fourth movements do not make up for the odd first two. Symphony No. 2, heard as
usual in its 1879-80 version, is also very well played, and there is a wealth
of fine detail in the first three movements. But the fourth movement is
peculiar: it is taken unusually quickly, albeit convincingly, at first – until
the gong that heralds the final section, which here leads to complete stoppage
of the forward impetus, then a very slow accelerando,
and then eventually a conclusion so fast that even this first-class orchestra
barely keeps up. Also included on this disc is the original (1872) version of
the first movement – an intriguing addition that points to one of the release’s
real strengths: its ancillary, supplementary material, which tends to come off
better than do some of the symphonies that are the primary focus here.
The first two symphonies’ lacks do not extend to the very fine Third.
Here the tempos are well chosen, the balletic elements so important to this
symphony are well communicated and thoroughly understood, the lighter moments
are nicely contrasted with the more-serious ones, and the overall effect is of
a substantial work with considerable drive, brightness and elegance. The only
disappointment is the third of the fifth movements, the central Andante, which Pletnev takes too slowly
and deliberately, so that it somewhat drags down the rest of the symphony. The
interpretation is justifiable, but in light of the mostly jaunty tempos
elsewhere, the movement seems a bit overthought and overdone. In all, though,
this is a well-done interpretation – and as well-played as are all the works in
this Pletnev cycle. The Fourth fares very well, too. From the opening
proclamation of the “fate” motif on burnished brass, through a first movement
handled with tone-poem flair so its length does not seem ungainly and its
episodic nature makes perfect sense, Pletnev shows his clear understanding of
and empathy for Tchaikovsky’s music – more so here than elsewhere. A second
movement that nicely balances the first, rocking gently and not wallowing in
the emotionalism of the lengthy opening, is followed by a quicksilver pizzicato
Scherzo that flits and dances about
and enfolds a rollicking Trio in
which the woodwind playing is outstanding. Then the finale bursts like thunder
onto the scene, with Pletnev’s pacing and – yet again – the excellent playing
of the orchestra combining to produce a thrilling and highly dramatic
conclusion. If Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2 are mannered and fussy in Pletnev’s
readings, Nos. 3 and 4 are well-thought-out and well-managed.
The problem is that when Pletnev fails, he does so on a large scale –
and his Tchaikovsky Fifth is, not to mince words, a failure. It is an odd failure, a throwback to the days
when the conductor mattered more than the composer, when Tchaikovsky’s deep
emotionalism (over-emotionalism to some) invited swooning on the podium and a
level of rubato that, far from
bringing out the inner workings and feelings of the music, inevitably imposed
the conductor’s feelings on it, and
on the audience. This is simply unforgivable today, even when the conductor is
Pletnev. His Tchaikovsky Fifth is well-nigh incoherent, the tempos varying so
much in the first and final movements that listeners will be whipsawed rather
than pulled along through this most carefully structured of Tchaikovsky’s
symphonic works. The finale is little short of a disaster, slowing down so much
that the rhythm flags, then speeding up to such a point that the beauties and
the musical lines themselves are simply lost. And the coda, which always hangs
uneasily onto this otherwise profound symphony, is a mess, so perfunctory that
it seems as if Pletnev had simply had enough of the symphony and wanted to get
it over with. The orchestra’s still-superb playing is not nearly enough to
compensate for all the conductor’s quirks, which result in an inelegant and
ill-considered interpretation. But just when it is tempting to give up on
Pletnev’s Tchaikovsky sequence, something comes along to redeem it: Symphony
No. 6. Although the reading included here lacks the elegance and some of the
interpretative nuances of Pletnev’s 1991 recording of the work for Virgin
Classics, this 2010 version is amazingly well-played, exceptionally
well-recorded (much better than the older one), and filled with highly
sensitive touches. The opening bassoon, for example, sounds particularly gloomy
here, while the gorgeous main theme of the first movement has a yearning
wistfulness that is deeply felt without being mawkish or overdone. Pletnev
clearly broadened his view of the symphony in the decades after the 1991
recording: the first and last movements in this later version are both longer
than on Virgin Classics, where they were already expansive. But nothing in them
feels stretched; nor do the middle movements sound rushed. The second movement
flows with considerable beauty and elegance, while the scurrying, speedy
opening of the third effectively introduces a movement whose increasingly
frenetic tone makes the depressive start of the finale all the more pathétique. The last movement starts almost languidly, moving
more deeply into despair as it progresses, and eventually fading into
nothingness with a very moving sigh of resignation. This performance reaffirms both
the symphony’s place in the classical-music canon and Pletnev’s expertise with
the work.
As for the Manfred Symphony,
written between Nos. 4 and 5, Pletnev’s performance is one of the best in this
set, allowing the often-gorgeous themes to flow freely while not engaging in
the sort of overdone rubato that mars
Nos. 1, 2 and 5. The beautiful second theme of the first movement and the whole
of the third come across particularly appealingly here, and Pletnev does not
hesitate to pull out all the stops in the somewhat over-the-top finale, in
which the organ (played by Norbert Gembaczka) fits very well. The performance
is involving and flows elegantly, and the sound is first-rate.
The bonus elements that help lift this set above mediocrity are all
handled very well, with little evidence of the sort of overthinking that mars
some of the symphonic readings. Marche
Slave (on disc #1) is a jaunty quickstep, with light and bright winds, and
has a concluding section that is quite speedy – far too fast to march to – but
very well played. The brass is outstanding in a performance that makes this
definitely a piece for the concert hall, not the parade ground. The less-known Concert March (on disc #3) is all
bombast at the start, very proclamatory – with the strings sounding lovely in
the contrasting central section, which also features much lighter wind
highlights. Then the return of the brass, in chorale form, heralds a powerful
recapitulation that includes some of the same material as heard in Marche Slave.
Romeo and Juliet (on disc #4)
opens with quiet delicacy, followed by a main section that is very fast, almost
hectic – but the strings, as always, manage to keep up. There is a substantial
slowdown into the famous “love theme,” which is handled with considerable
delicacy. The intermingling of themes thereafter is managed very skillfully,
although Pletnev favors speed and drama over emotional evocation. The work’s last
three minutes, however, are very affecting, especially the extended harp
passages. Francesca da Rimini (on
disc #5) features a very dramatic opening, the sound of eternal winds
impressively conveyed by the excellent strings. The brass interjections are
very forceful, to the point of overwhelming some of the main thematic material
in the strings – making this a somewhat divisive interpretation of what is
arguably Tchaikovsky’s greatest tone poem. The central section, in which
Francesca tells her tale, brings woodwinds to the fore and is expansively
handled, sounding plaintive for a time, then sweet. It mounts to a moving
climax, after which the sound of the eternal winds starts to sneak back in, the
music quickly becoming dramatic again as those winds become intense and the
brass highlights and interjections resume, leading to a very strong close.
Finally, Capriccio Italien (on disc
#6) is strongly rhythmic and well-balanced, with the first-rate brass brought
to the fore. After the first five minutes, as the pace picks up, there is a
nice lilt to the sunny thematic material, and the percussion is particularly well-handled.
This is, all in all, a bright and jaunty performance with emphatic rhythms and
fine highlighting of orchestral sections.
It is difficult to sum up the effect of this important but decidedly odd Tchaikovsky cycle. Some of it is outstanding, some astonishingly ill-considered: it is hard to grasp the reality that performances of such extremes all come from the same conductor. The cycle is such an odd mixture of excellence and ineptitude that Tchaikovsky aficionados will definitely want to think twice, or maybe three or four times, before committing to a purchase.
No comments:
Post a Comment