Brahms:
Eleven Chorale Preludes for Organ, Op. 122, orchestrated by Virgil Thomson;
Intermezzo in A, Op. 118, No. 2, orchestrated as “Black Swan for Orchestra” by
Bright Sheng; Piano Quartet No. 1, orchestrated by Arnold Schoenberg. Kansas City Symphony conducted by Michael Stern.
Reference Recordings. $16.98.
Danny
Elfman: Percussion Concerto; Wunderkammer; Are You Lost? Colin Currie, percussion; Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta. Sony. $13.98.
Brahms’ approach to
orchestration was rich, even opulent, but his last works – although still
suitably characterized as “autumnal,” an adjective often used of Brahms’ music
– were solo or chamber pieces in which he deliberately eschewed massed sound in
favor of clarity and his own version of delicacy. It may therefore seem like
something of a fool’s errand to orchestrate some of those final Brahms works,
but if so, there are some mighty fine foolish orchestrators out there, as a
very unusual and very appealing Reference Recordings release shows. Its most
striking element is Virgil Thomson’s orchestration of Brahms’ final,
posthumously published Eleven Chorale
Preludes for Organ, created after the death of his longtime friend and
apparently unrequited love, Clara Schumann, whom Brahms outlived by less than a
year. The nine Lutheran chorales (No. 10 is an additional setting of No. 9 and
No. 11 an additional setting of No. 3) are simply and elegantly presented as
organ works, expressive without being over-decorated, emotive without
wallowing. They are lovely – and are considerably more spiritual than might be
expected of Brahms, who although baptized a Lutheran was a humanist/agnostic (and
from whom Dvořák famously became estranged as a result). Whether it was Clara
Schumann’s death, his own approaching end of life, or some other factor – or a
combination of elements – that led him to these simple, beautifully evocative
spiritual settings, the chorale preludes show a side of Brahms that is rarely
to be heard elsewhere in his music. And Thomson, himself a fine (and
underrated) composer, was technically careful and emotionally respectful when
orchestrating the works in 1957-58. Michael Stern leads the Kansas City
Symphony in a performance that mirrors the care brought to the
orchestration by Thomson while also adhering to the underlying spirituality –
which includes a degree of sadness – that is incorporated by Brahms into all 11
of these short works. Stern and the ensemble also produce a warm, caring performance
of a Brahms orchestration that does not hew quite so closely to the composer’s
original concept. It is Black Swan,
an arrangement by Bright Sheng (born 1955) of another late Brahms work with a
strong Clara Schumann connection: Intermezzo
in A, Op. 118, No. 2, which Brahms dedicated to her and which she in turn
praised to the composer for its “wealth of sentiment.” By giving his
orchestration its own title, Sheng indicates that he is doing more than simply
adapting this piano piece for an ensemble. And indeed he takes the music a step
beyond Brahms’ original, using sectional sounds to accentuate its passion,
emotional heft and closing wistfulness. The underlying melodies and harmonies
remain those of Brahms, but the more-expansive emotionalism of the piece –
well-communicated under Stern’s direction – is Sheng’s contribution. Yet Sheng
does not personalize this music to the extent that Arnold Schoenberg does
Brahms’ Piano Quartet No. 1, a much
earlier work (written in 1861, when Brahms was 28) that Schoenberg (1874-1951) adapted
late in his own life, in 1937 (there is a Clara Schumann connection here as
well: she was the pianist in the quartet’s first performance). Brahms’ chamber
music often possesses symphonic qualities, so to some extent it is scarcely
surprising that another composer would seek to bring them out. And Schoenberg,
for all his fame (or notoriety) in twelvetone composition and atonality, had
considerable respect for Brahms. But he was also very much steeped in his own compositional
style, and his expansion (it is more than an orchestration) of this Brahms
quartet makes that abundantly clear. Schoenberg insistently finds symphonic
elements throughout the quartet – more than Brahms put into it, except perhaps
by implication – and brings them out through his own considerable skill at
orchestration and willingness to take the music well beyond Brahms’ own
harmonic and expressive world. The adaptation is interestingly reflective of
Schoenberg’s own creative production, which began with late-Romantic works
before becoming famously acerbic and decidedly un-Romantic in sound and
orientation. Schoenberg does not hesitate to update elements of Brahms’ sound
world to his own – the percussion use in the finale is an especially clear
example – nor does he feel obliged to adhere to Brahms’ own notions of harmony
and balance. The result is a work that feels a bit like a pastiche, a bit like
a tribute, a bit like a rethinking, and a bit like something altogether new. It
is really not the Brahms quartet at all, despite being foundationally derived
from it. But it is quite fascinating to hear and is often exceedingly cleverly
structured – and it is presented with considerable verve, as well as
understanding, by Stern and his very fine orchestra. The disc as a whole will
perhaps be of greatest interest to listeners who already know Brahms’ own
versions of the music – but even those who do not will find much to enjoy and
explore here, although one would hope they would eventually seek out these
pieces the way the composer himself conceptualized them.
There is no question about either the concept or the presentation of the
music of Danny Elfman (born 1953) on a new Sony CD, but there are certainly
some surprises here. Elfman is known almost entirely as a film composer (he has
written music for more than 100 movies) and singer/songwriter; his association
with the concert hall is tenuous at best. This disc, however, shines a
different and thoroughly engaging light on his work. In fact, listening to
Elfman’s Percussion Concerto shortly
after hearing Schoenberg’s orchestration of Brahms’ Piano Quartet No. 1 – especially that work’s finale – is quite an
intriguing experience, the juxtaposition shining as much light on Elfman’s
skills with percussive thinking as on Schoenberg’s. Elfman’s music is more
overtly accessible than much of Schoenberg’s oeuvre, though, and the Percussion
Concerto is nothing if not involving. It is a significant tour de force for Colin Currie, for whom
it was written, and also requires JoAnn Falletta to put the Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic Orchestra through a considerable set of paces – which she and the
ensemble manage with genuine panache. For all its performance complexity, the Percussion Concerto continually gives
the impression that it is not to be taken overly seriously, at least not by the
audience: it is fun above all, and
Elfman’s skill at producing readily accessible, interestingly conceived music
that may not be profound but is certainly listenable, is everywhere apparent. The
concerto is in four movements: Triangle,
which in the absence of three Curries requires three percussionists; DSCH, the initials of Dmitri
Shostakovich, which that composer himself incorporated into many of his works
and which Elfman uses to indicate a sort-of-tribute; Down, a slow meandering through more-extended harmonies than Elfman
uses elsewhere; and Syncopate, which
relieves any hint of auditory stress from the previous movement by splashing
sound all over the place with a level of exhilaration that is thoroughly
infectious. Complementing this unusual and appealing concerto on the CD is the
world première recording of Wunderkammer,
a word referring to a room filled with a random assortment of odd and appealing
knickknacks. It turns out that the piece is more appealing than odd: here
Elfman’s skill at film composition is everywhere apparent, with each of the
three movements sounding as if it is accompanying some sort of unseen visualization
– and the use of vocalise adds to that impression. Although not designated as a
percussion concerto, this work certainly gives the percussion section a
considerable and near-constant workout – although, to be fair, all the
orchestral sections get pushed to extremes, not of subtlety but often of
volume, as the piece progresses. There is nothing the slightest bit subtle about
Wunderkammer: even its attractive
central slow movement, although it provides respite from the hectic material
that precedes it and largely avoids exclamatory percussion, offers the sort of
straightforward emotion-weaving that is to be expected in music intended to
underline the visuals of films. And the finale, unsurprisingly, offers the sort
of noisily emphatic martial proclamations with which Elfman appears
particularly comfortable – it is full of sound and fury even if it signifies,
well, not very much. The CD does, however, conclude with a bit of a surprise: a
song from Elfman’s Trio called Are You Lost? Although there is
percussion here, it is comparatively downplayed in scoring that also includes
women’s voices, piano and strings; and the piece (sung in French) is gentler
and quieter than is usual in Elfman’s music. It is scarcely profound and
certainly breaks no new musical ground – consonance, harmony and facile
expression of easily perceived emotions are hallmarks of the work – but it is,
all in all, somewhat less intense and insistent than the rest of the music on
this disc. It is far from subtle or deep, but it at least ends the recording by
providing some respite from material that, although salutary, is frequently a
kind of aural assault – a pleasant and well-crafted one, to be sure, but
scarcely an experience to which most listeners will want to subject themselves
on an ongoing basis – although these Elfman works are certainly worth experiencing
from time to time, perhaps in somewhat smaller doses than are provided by this
all-Elfman recording.