Rachmaninoff:
Trio élégiaque No. 1; Trio élégiaque No. 2; Romances, Op. 21, Nos. 5 and 7;
Romances, Op. 38, Nos. 3 and 5; Tchaikovsky: The Seasons, Op. 37a–No. 10. Andrey Baranov, violin; Christoph Croisé, cello;
Alexander Panfilov, cello. AVIE. $19.99.
Eduard
Strauss: Waltzes and Polkas, Volume 3.
Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice conducted by Marek Štilec. Marco
Polo. $19.99.
Music
for Solo Clarinet by Jean Rivier, Eberhard Werdin, Karl Maria Kubizek, Daron
Hagen, and James Lee III. Jeremy
Reynolds, clarinet. MSR Classics. $14.95.
The sounds of the Romantic era are instantly recognizable for their
lushness and emotional fullness, and certain composers are particularly
identified with the time period – including Rachmaninoff, who was actually
post-Romantic based on his lifetime (1873-1943), but who was steeped from his
earliest compositions in the Romantic ethos and never moved far from it. Just how
thoroughly Romanticism permeated Rachmaninoff’s music is evident from his two
piano trios, composed in 1892 and 1893 respectively and intended as tributes to
Rachmaninoff’s mentor, Tchaikovsky, who is often thought of as the quintessential Romantic composer.
First-rate performances of the trios featuring Andrey Baranov, Christoph Croisé
and Alexander Panfilov, now available on the AVIE label, clearly show
Rachmaninoff’s debt to Tchaikovsky as well as his thoroughgoing absorption of the
compositional elements of the Romantic time period. For all their similarities
of sound, the two trios are strikingly different in approach. No. 1 is a
single-movement work, written while Tchaikovsky was alive and having some
musical as well as emotional connections to the older composer’s Op. 50 trio –
which, ironically, was subtitled “in memory of a great artist” and was
Tchaikovsky’s tribute to the recently deceased Nikolai Rubinstein. Tchaikovsky
repeatedly expressed his dislike of the aural combination of violin, piano and
cello, but Rachmaninoff is clearly comfortable with the sonic mixture, and
unsurprisingly gives the piano an especially strong role. Baranov, Croisé and
Panfilov focus on the first trio’s very considerable warmth and funereal
atmosphere, dwelling on its dark G minor home key and its pervasive melancholy.
The second trio, written as an elegy for Tchaikovsky after his death, is more
on the scale of Tchaikovsky’s own and is substantial in every way, lasting some
50 minutes. This trio bears the same “in memory of a great artist” dedication
as Tchaikovsky’s for Rubinstein, strongly cementing the relationship between
the two works. Indeed, Rachmaninoff’s trio, which is in D minor, is structured
very similarly to Tchaikovsky’s in A minor. All the weight of Rachmaninoff’s
work is in the first two movements, which together last more than 40 minutes.
The solemnity of the first is complemented by the more-varied second, which is
a set of variations on a theme from Rachmaninoff’s symphonic poem The Rock. In this trio, as in his first,
Rachmaninoff makes many demands of the piano, and the opening of the finale
looks ahead to the composer’s later forays into piano-centric composition. The
expansiveness of this trio comes through exceptionally well in this performance,
with the three players complementing each other skillfully and each buoying the
sound of the other two. Listeners will certainly be interested more in the
trios than in the remainder of this CD, which also offers very fine sound and
playing but which is rather thin gruel in terms of musical content. The five
items added to the two trios are, in effect, pleasant encores. Four are from Romances by Rachmaninoff, as arranged by
Panfilov; all are pleasant and unassuming. The fifth offers a direct, if brief,
connection to Tchaikovsky: it is Autumn
Song from The Seasons, arranged
by Louis Eaton, and it practically weeps with nostalgia and the quiet sadness
so closely identified with Romanticism and with Tchaikovsky in particular. The
sensitivity of all the performances on this disc is considerable, the playing
is very fine throughout, and the emotional connections of the music come
through strongly and effectively.
The frequently heavy emotionality of the Romantic era, it should be
noted, had its counterpart and contrast in music deliberately created to be
much lighter in character – with composers such as the members of Vienna’s
Strauss family specializing in just that sort of less-fraught material. Johann
Strauss Jr. and Josef Strauss remain celebrated for their contributions to this
lighter-side-of-Romanticism genre, and Johann Strauss Sr. is also
well-regarded. But the elder Strauss’ third and longest-surviving son, Eduard
(1835-1916), has received much less attention, often complimented as a
conductor in his lifetime but generally being dismissed as a composer of lesser
works than those of his brothers and father. Conductor John Georgiadis
(1939-2021) was making an attempt to delve into Eduard’s music deeply enough to
uncover more value than others have found in it: his two volumes on the Marco
Polo label brought out some gems as well as a number of what might be called
semi-precious stones. With Georgiadis’ death, the Eduard Strauss project went
into abeyance; but now there is a third entry in it, conducted very ably by
Marek Štilec and played with considerable verve and style by the members of the
Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice. Eduard Strauss is so
underrepresented on disc that 14 of the 15 tracks on this CD are world première
recordings in their original orchestrations; the 15th item, the
brief fast polka Pegasus-Sprünge, is
heard in an arrangement by Kurt Schmid. The earliest work on this disc dates to
1869, the latest to 1888, affirming that all this music was created at the
height of the Romantic era and reflects elements of its sensibilities quite
different from those in the music of composers of a much more serious
orientation. Eduard Strauss, as this third entry in the Marco Polo series
reaffirms, was especially adept in the shorter forms of dance music. There are
seven examples here, one being Pegasus-Sprünge
and the others called Herz und Welt
(a polka-mazurka), Brausteufelchen (a
combination fast polka and galop), In
Lieb’ entbrannt (a polka française), Aus
den schlesischen Bergen (a polka-mazurka), Ein Jahr freiwillig (a polka française), and Zeitvertreib (a fast polka). Each title refers to something specific
at the time of the work’s composition, but what listeners will notice today is
that these are not occasional pieces at all: Eduard Strauss imbues every one of
them with style, bounce and melodic pleasantries that are at least at the same
level as similar works by his elder brothers. The CD alternates the shorter
pieces with waltzes: Wo Lust und Freude
wohnen! is the first of these, followed by Glühlichter, Theorien, and Mit
frohem Muth und heiterm Sinn! Then come Heitere
Weisen, Stimmen aus dem Publikum, Widmungsblätter, and finally Denksprüche. These works also have many
charms and are uniformly well-made, but they lack the thematic richness of
waltzes by Johann Jr. and the near-symphonic developmental complexity of those
by Josef. Falling short of those loftiest of accomplishments in three-quarter
time, though, is scarcely justification for the longstanding neglect of Eduard
Strauss’ waltzes, which sound fresh, melodically rich and very much danceable
in these performances. There is a great deal more music by Eduard Strauss that
has lain neglected for more than two centuries, and on the basis of this
release and the two earlier ones, rediscovery of his music – and its place in
the Romantic era – is long overdue, providing a much-needed balance for the serious
emotional expressiveness with which Romantic music is more often associated.
The post-Romantic sound world changed in many ways, some dramatic and others subtle, and the alterations are particularly interesting when it comes to music for a single instrument. The five solo-clarinet works on a new CD from MSR Classics offer listeners entry points to sounds that range from those of the post-Romantic time period to those of the 21st century. The earliest of these works dates to 1969 and is by Karl Maria Kubizek (1929-1995). Called Capriccio - 6 Stücke für klarinette solo, it offers half a dozen well-contrasted vignettes that include a very short and interestingly labeled Adagio sensibile, a bright and lively Allegretto capriccioso, a heartfelt Più lento e molto espressivo whose squeals show how far from Romantic sensibilities it lies, and a concluding Agitato filled with rhythmic and expressive changes – all of which Jeremy Reynolds handles with aplomb and a fine sense of tonal balance. From the same time period (1972) is a work by Jean Rivier (1896-1987) called Les Trois “S” pour clarinette solo. The overall title reflects three movements labeled Sillages (“wakes”), Soliloque (“soliloquy”), and Serpentins (“streamers”). This being a solo-clarinet piece, all three movements are really soliloquies, but Rivier is mainly interested in contrasting the moods as well as the techniques required for each of the three. The slow central movement here partakes rather more of the Romantic spirit than does anything in Kubizek’s work, but the dissonances and unexpected leaps created by Rivier – especially in the final movement – place the music firmly in the mid-to-late 20th century. Still more recent, dating to 1987, is a piece by Eberhard Werdin (1911-1991) called Impressionen für klarinette solo. It is in six very short movements – the longest just reaches two minutes – and gives the soloist plenty of opportunities to demonstrate a wide range of performance techniques, with all of which Reynolds appears to be totally comfortable. The minute-and-a-half Thema mit Variationen is a highlight here, as is the concluding Finale giocondo, which proves to be a touch lyrical as well as playful. The other pieces on this disc are from our current century. Icarus for Solo Clarinet is the shortest work on the CD, lasting just four minutes. It dates to 2007 and was written by Daron Hagen (born 1961). It explores and contrasts the instrument’s lowest and highest registers and, like several other pieces here, is a showcase for technique more than a listener-engaging experience. The disc concludes with the three-movement Principal Brothers No. 3 for Solo Clarinet (2020) by James Lee III (born 1975). This piece too gives the performer the chance to explore many techniques and to pull sounds of all sorts from the clarinet, not all of them reflective of the instrument’s usual warmth. smoothness and subtlety. All five works on this CD are world première recordings, and all five are much more likely to appeal to Reynolds’ fellow clarinetists than to a more-general audience – making this into a (+++) disc that, despite lasting just 49 minutes, packs in a considerable amount of exploration of woodwind sounds that go well beyond those of the Romantic era.
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