David's
Review Corner - November 2005
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Toward the Unknown Region. Willow-Wood. The Voice
out of the Whirlwind. Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus. The Sons of Light.
Roderick Williams (baritone), Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Chorus and Orchestra,
David Lloyd-Jones (conductor). Naxos 8.557798. (61' 49")
An absolutely priceless disc of Vaughan Williams rarities,
including the world premiere recording of the cantata Willow-Wood, a
score originally dating from 1903 in a version for voice and piano, and orchestrated
six years later with added chorus. By the time of the first version Vaughan
Williams was already thirty, his development as a composer having been slow
to come to fruition. He had begin preliminary work on A Sea Symphony,
the score that was to mark the end of his 'apprenticeship', and though the symphony
was to become one of his best known, the two works are, in style and musical
content, totally complementary. It has been extremely fortunate to have Roderick
Williams as the baritone soloist for its disc debut, every word perfectly enunciated
in a voice born to sing the English song repertoire. Marry that with the Royal
Liverpool Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra on top form and you have an invaluable
addition to the catalogue. Towards the Unknown Region was completed in
1906 and has remained on the fringe of the British concert repertoire. The
Voice out of the Whirlwind, originally written for London's first St. Cecilia's
Day service after the end of the Second World War, is extensive, dramatic, red-blooded
and colourful, The Sons of Light for chorus and orchestra coming from
the latter part of his life. I am not sure why the oft recorded Five Variants
of Dives and Lazarus has been included in such a disc of discovery, but it is
given a first class performance. Anglophiles have become permanently indebted
to David Lloyd-Jones for his forays into the little known, and though other
conductors will want to be described as today's leading conductor of British
music, for me he is in a class all of its own. Add a very fine recording and
you have a fabulous release.
BRAHMS: Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 73. Hungarian
Dances Nos. 1, 3, 10, 17, 18, 19, 20 & 21. London Philharmonic Orchestra,
Marin Alsop (conductor). Naxos 8.557429. (65' 06").
Opening Naxos's new cycle of the Brahms symphonies, Marin Alsop
drew considerable critical acclaim around the world for her performance of the
First Symphony, and I find the Second even more compelling. There is spaciousness
to her account of the first two movements with tempos that allow the music to
unfold with warmth and a feeling of restrained strength. Her pulse is always
fluid in shaping phrases, never looking to make new revelations, the music speaking
for itself. The third movement is equally unhurried, her finale refusing to
enter into the usual unedifying dash to the finishing line. It is sobriety
that continues in the nicely shaped group of Hungarian Dances, where the usual
romp through the music is replaced by cleanly delineated playing that permits
note values to be precise rather than estimated. The LPO play well throughout,
the strings suitably smooth and redolent, the recording never overstating the
brass parts. I am sure it us going to add up to a most satisfying cycle.
BERNSTEIN: Serenade. Facsimile. Divertimento. Philippe
Quint (violin), Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Marin Alsop (conductor). Naxos
8.559245. (65' 05").
A violin concerto by any other name, the Serenade is divided
into five sections, each headed by a character from Greek history. The result
is a thirty-minute score of vivid extremes, Bernstein's genius coming with the
use of strings and percussion to create a multicoloured backdrop. It dates from
1954, the spiky rhythms and moments of sugary sweetness calling upon the soloist
to display a whole range of talents. It could not have a more assured protagonist
than Philippe Quint, his brilliant technique matched by wonderfully smooth lyric
passages, the pungency of the fast finale brought off with suitable verve. Its
mood prepares the way for the composer's concert version of his ballet, Facsimile,
a work typically full of Bernstein's catchy tunes and rhythms, his trademark
continuing in the light-hearted Divertimento. With tongue-in-cheek humour we
have a waltz, mazurka, samba and turkey trot among the eight movements. The
Bournemouth orchestra turns in fabulous performances for Bernstein's protege,
Marin Alsop. The playing is so crisp and neat that it really is a cut above
most Bernstein records from the States. Sound to match the vivid playing.
HOVHANESS: Symphonies No. 4 op.165; No. 20 op. 233 ''Three
Journeys in a Holy Mountain' & No. 53. Return and Rebuild the Desolate Places,
Op.213. The Prayer of St Gregory, op.62b. John Wallace (trumpet), The Royal
Scottish Academy of Music and Drama Wind Orchestra, Keith Brion (conductor).
Naxos 8.559207. (66' 01").
This is one of the most stunningly brilliant wind orchestra
discs I have ever heard. I know I blow hot and cold about Alan Hovhaness, the
most prolific American composer of the 20th century who completed sixty-seven
symphonies before his death five years ago, but this is different. Often reproved
for spreading musical gifts over too many works, at his most persuasive he spoke
in a language that can be readily understood and appreciated, even by those
grappling to comprehend music of our time. Of Armenian and Scottish descent,
Hovhaness has passed through four very distinct phases, making easy categorisation
of his output quite difficult. His Fourth symphony dates from 1958, Hovhaness
having destroyed most of his sizeable output in the early 1940's and stated
all over again. It is scored, as are all the works on the disc, for an orchestral
wind department and percussion, the oft changes of mood, at times quite violent,
creating a kaleidoscope of colourful sounds. The Twentieth came ten years later,
the score fragrant in Armenia and spirituality, the sense of infinite space
featured in the two short movements of the Fifty-third symphony. Between are
two works for trumpet and wind, the same sense of otherworldliness acting as
a backdrop to the famous trumpet of John Wallace. Throughout the playing is
immaculate, perfectly in tune and idiomatic to the music under the direction
of their American conductor, Keith Brion. If this were the Chicago Symphony
or Philadelphia wind sections we would automatically be heaping acclaim on the
disc, and I hope my fellow critics around the world will afford these young
musicians the equal praise they so deserve. The sound quality is superb.
RIES: Piano Concerto No. 6, Op. 123. Piano Concerto
No.8, Op.151, 'Salut au Rhin'. Christopher Hinterhuber (piano), New Zealand
Symphony Orchestra, Uwe Grodd (conductor). Naxos 8.557638. (60' 55").
Ferdinand Ries was the son of Franz Anton Ries who had taught
Beethoven, and it was Beethoven who became the piano teacher for his son, this
teacher-pupil relationship becoming a lasting friendship. Born in Germany in
1784, Ries's early career was insecure until visiting London in 1813 where he
was to spend the following 11 years. He was regarded there as the finest pianist-composer
of his time, and built such a fortune that at the age of 40 was able to retire
with his English wife to his native Rhineland. He composed a vast amount of
music in every genre, including stage works and symphonies, most including the
piano in its many guises. Eight numbered piano concertos (numbered 2 to 9) exist,
the influences of his mentor bringing strength to his concept, though Mozart
lurks in the background. If melodic invention does not sink readily into the
memory, this is well-crafted music that challenges the nimbleness of the soloist
in the outer movements. At times you wonder if Chopin knew the music, Ries's
decorative style a foretaste of Chopin's concertos yet to come. They have never
been previously recorded, bur surely their easy-going attractiveness is destined
to win them many friends. Try track 3 to sample Christopher Hinterhuber's brilliance
as notes appear in vast numbers, the piano decorating the melody in the most
elaborate arabesques. The orchestral accompaniments are suitably robust, and
the recording absolutely first rate.
JACQUET DE LA GUERRE: Harpsichord Suites Nos. 1-6. Elizabeth
Farr (harpsichord). Naxos 8.557654-55 (2 CDs). (142' 46").
Described as 'the marvel of our century', Elisabeth Cluade
Jacquet de la Guerre became the most famous French composer in the early part
of the 18th century, and a favourite of Louis XIV to whom she dedicated many
works. From a family deeply involved with music and the major producer of harpsichords
at that time. Her date of birth was probably 1664, and though an outstanding
performer as a young women, it was the early deaths of her husband and son in
1704 that concentrated her mind on composition. Few works whose existence was
documented have survived, the present disc presenting some of her most important
pieces. Often exhilarating, full of vitality, and rhythmically vibrant, go to
track 6 on the first disc, the Gigue from the First Suite, for a taste of the
sparkling writing. As with all Suites of the period, they are a series of dances,
Jacquet creating quite complex pieces within a formalised framework, the style
a foretaste of music to come from the Couperin family. Even they could not offer
more attractive pieces than many we have here, though a few bald patches appear
in the later suites. Elizabeth Farr revels in the strong quality of the music,
her fingers getting around all the twists and turns with considerable agility.
The harpsichord she is using is a bold sounding instrument that packs plenty
of punch, enhanced by the close microphones. Any lover of the harpsichord should
waste no time in acquiring these discs.
VILLA-LOBOS: Bachianas Brasileiras Nos. 1 - 9. Rosana
Lamosa (soprano), Jose Feghali (piano), Nashville Symphony Orchestra, Kenneth
Schermerhorn, Andrew Mogrelia (conductors). Naxos 8.557460-62 (3 CDs). (155'
17").
Orchestras are not queuing up to record Villa-Lobos's strange
and sprawling tribute to Bach, its various elements placing the performers under
sever scrutiny, and there is at present only one other complete version in the
CD catalogue performed by the same orchestra. Composed between 1930 and 1945
it was intended to bring Bach to Brazil in the 20th century, each movement given
both a Baroque and modern title, though truth to tell you will find little Bach.
Divided into nine major sections, then subdivided into numerous movements, Bachianas
Brasileiras is rarely performed in concert due to its length and diverse elements
that call for very differing combinations of instruments. Sensibly Kenneth Schermerhorn
- how this orchestra is going to miss their Music Director now he is no more
- does not highlight sections, and creates a more united score than even the
composer managed in his recording. His death left Andrew Mogrelia to record
the first Bachianas, the cellos seemingly unable to reach their usual impeccable
standard in music that tests them, but from therein the orchestra is in fine
form, bringing out details that are often lost. The semi-wordless vocalising
of the soprano is rather too forward in the only vocal moment (the choir is
omitted in the ninth Bachianas), though Rosana Lamosa swoops around to create
its usual allure. On the other hand the solo pianist, Jose Feghali, succeeds
in integrating the keyboard into the texture more than usual in the third Bachianas.
There is just one alternative on disc from the French National Radio Orchestra,
their cellos hardly more comfortable than the Nashville team, and though it
has the composer at the helm, its sound is dated compared with this well recorded
new edition. A novelty and Naxos are to be thanked for making it available at
its bargain price.
BEETHOVEN: Fidelio (Highlights): Inga Nielsen (Leonora),
Gosta Winbergh (Florestan), Kurt Moll (Rocco), Edith Lienbacher (Marzelline),
Alan Titus (Don Pizzaro), Wolfgang Glashof (Don Fernando), Nicholaus Esterhazy
Orchestra, Michael Halasz (conductor). Naxos 8.557892. (71' 04").
Strange that Naxos is issuing these highlights in the same
month as the reissue of the legendary Furtwangler version. Yet they are very
different, this disc - which contains around half of the work - offering the
modern view of a young woman hell bent on saving a wrongly imprisoned man. Rip
up the philosophical slant on the story, for this is vivid drama, Halasz directing
with urgent tempos, his orchestra weighty but sounding more akin to a pit-sized
band than we normally hear on disc. Just compare the burnished tones of the
horns on Furtwangler's Vienna recording with the bright and incisive quality
of the Hungarian musicians, and that just about sums up the difference in the
whole performance. Indeed it has been listening to both performances that reinforces
the fact that this recording is up there among the best on disc, with Inga Nielsen's
Leonora a vivid characterisation, and Gosta Winbergh probably the best Florestan
around today. The remaining roles, with the exception of the wide vibrato of
Wolfgang Glashof in the minor part of Don Fernando, are all excellently taken,
the problem is that once you have heard this disc you are going to want the
whole performance.
SAMMARTINI: Symphonies in A major, C minor, D major,
F major, D minor and C major. Aradia Ensemble, Kevin Mallon (conductor). Naxos
8.557298. (60' 21").
It is from his death certificate that we learn Giovanni Battista
Sammartini's date of birth as being 1700 or the first few weeks of the following
year. After that event little is recorded as to his education save for the fact
that he came from a musical father who may have taught him. He was certainly
born in Milan and hardly ever ventured outside of that region, his reputation
as a composer created by his scores being published abroad. In Italy he was
only known as a church musician who at one time took charge of music in almost
every major church in his home city. His output was vast and almost 80 symphonies
survived him, together with numerous concertos, operas and a sizeable quantity
of sacred and secular choral music. He passed through several periods, his earliest
in the footsteps of Vivaldi through to a foretaste of Mozart. Critically analysed
he was a diligent craftsman rather than an innovative composer, generally happy
to produce attractive and inoffensive scores. The present group of six symphonies
comes from his middle period and composed for strings with pairs of horns or
trumpets. He experimented with the number of movements though here they are
generally of the fast -slow - fast format. They are most persuasive when the
music bubbles happily along, typically in the opening movement of the F major
symphony (track 11) where harmonies have a little more pungency. The Aradia
Ensemble play with the crisp and neat quality we expect from them, the sound
quality is as open and bright as their playing.
MONTEVERDI: Lamento d’Arianna. Si dolce e il tormento.
PERI: Al fonte al prato. Lungi dal vostro lume. Se tu parti da me. Uccidimi
dolore. KAPSBERGER: Libro Quarto - Sferraina; Capona; Passacaglia. CACCINI:
Vedro ’l mio sol. Amarilli. Amor ch’attendi. ROGNIONO: Ancor che col
partire. The Catacoustic Consort, Annalisa Pappano (director). Naxos 8.557538.
(62' 01").
It seems that our forefathers in the early 17th century enjoyed
a bit of pain and suffering in their music, the famous Italian composers of
the time providing a series of Laments that miss nothing in overt sadness. Monteverdi's
Lamento d'Arianna is the most famous example that has survived, the droopy
style that is now in favour for such music provided in abundance by the soprano,
Catherine Webster. Her obvious standpoint that a wide range of dynamics would
not have been used at the time certainly carrying credibility, intonation throughout
being faultless. A whole disc of music that is really a glorified dirge would
have become a little too much of a good thing, so we have the lute and viol
providing a few tracks of a more uplifting instrumental nature. Kapsberger's
Capona is a particularly enjoyable piece (track 4), while Ancor che
col partire contains some fine playing from the viol. Catacoustic Consort
took first prize in the Early Music America Live Recording Competition in 2003,
an award that must have reflected the refined quality of their performances.
Good sound quality.
ARRIAGA: String Quartets Nos. 1 in D minor; No. 2 in
A major; No. 3 on E flat major. Camerata Boccherini. Naxos 8.557628. (69' 03").
As with so many composers who have died in their younger years,
we can only speculate as to the place they would have taken in the history of
music. In the case of the Spanish-born Juan Crisostomo de Arriaga we have the
added difficulty of so few works by which to judge his talents, the young man
dying in 1826 at the age of twenty. So we mainly rely on the documented high
regard of his mentors and three string quartets completed when he was 18. Mozart
and Haydn feature in the style of writing, but he added a personal warmth and
geniality, and even in the Third Quartet a foretaste of Beethoven's string quartets
yet to come. Arriaga had studied the violin and he places a heavy responsibility
on the leader, though he had also mastered the art of featuring the whole quartet
- in a way Beethoven was to perfect - giving much prominence to the cello. I
don't have a biography of the Camerata Boccherini, but they have that feel of
a young group still rather intoxicated with the music they are playing. It is
an enthusiasm that sweeps away some awkward violin intonation, and of the handful
of recordings available this would be my top choice. The sound quality is very
natural in a modest sized location.
SZYMANOWSKI: Nine Preludes Op.1. Piano Sonata No. 3,
Op.36. Variations in B flat minor, Op.3. Mazurkas, Op.50, Nos. 17 - 20, Two
Mazurkas, Op, 62. Valse Romantique. Martin Roscoe (piano). Naxos 8.557168. (68'
48").
I had almost given up hope of ever seeing this last volume
in the complete cycle of Szymanowski's piano works. If memory serves me right
it's five years ago since we saw the third and penultimate disc, but like all
good things it has been worth waiting for. Though always considered a Polish
national composer, Karol Szymanowski was born in the Ukraine in 1882 with a
mother of Swedish origin. At the age of 19 he went to study composition in Warsaw,
and there became part of the Young Poland Music Group, one of their members,
the conductor, Fitelberg, championing Szymanowski's music. It marked the beginning
of a highly productive period, his piano scores, with Debussy and Ravel in the
background, are often fiendishly difficult, the Nine Preludes moving from innocent
simplicity to passages that are technically rigorous. Though his music was little
understood in Poland, he did absorb their folk heritage as we hear in the Variations,
while the relatively brief Third Sonata, a much more cosmopolitan and somewhat
intangible work, toys with atonality and dates from 1917. The series thus far
has been gaining much critical acclaim, Martin Roscoe again brushing aside the
difficulties the composer throws at him, the minute detail and clarity of his
playing quite a revelation, while the big-boned opulence comes at the appropriate
moments. We may never hear performances on disc to equal these, the uncannily
realistic piano sound of equal merit.
TIPPETT: Piano Sonatas Nos. 1-3. Peter Donohoe (piano).
Naxos 8.557611. (53' 34").
This year marks the centenary of the birth of Michael Tippett,
Naxos adding to the celebrations with this very fine new recording of his first
three piano sonatas - I hope the fourth is yet to come. Like so many British
composers, Tippett was a late starter in life and was in his mid-30's before
his first work was published. Public awareness of the emerging talent came with
the oratorio, A Child of our Time, reflecting the Nazi atrocities in
a mixture of new music and popular spirituals. That mix was to signpost a composer
who throughout life chose many influences, often confusing his audiences as
his output swing from tonality to atonality. The three sonatas cover thirty-seven
years of his long life, the powerful utterances requiring a pianist who can
combine virtuosity with physical stamina, making Peter Donohoe the ideal choice.
In every respect the scores are different, the immediately attractive First
being in four movements, of which the vivacious third and mercurial fourth require
agility. Where the First is tonal and lyric, the Second is in one atonal aggressive
movement challenging both performer and listener, Donohoe sparing us nothing
in the naked modernity of the score. It dates from 1962, eleven years before
the Third sonata in three movements. Stylistically it straddles the first two,
and though there are some tender passages, it is a work that does not ask you
to like it. That the sonatas represent a major part of 20th century piano music
is without doubt, and in such outstanding performances and sound they are an
essential purchase.
GOULD: Jekyll and Hyde Variations. Fall River Legend
(complete ballet)
James F Neal (narrator), Nashville Symphony
Orchestra, Kenneth Schermerhorn (conductor). Naxos 8.559242. (73' 46").
Born in New York in 1913, Morton Gould first came to public
attention as a conductor in the field of light music, his weekly national radio
programmes becoming highly popular. Educated at the New York Institute for Musical
Art where he studied piano and composition, his output was to cover a wide spectrum
from films to large-scale symphonic works. American Salute, based on
the folk tune Johnny Comes Marching Home, has become highly popular,
though much of his more serious orchestral compositions have received a mixed
response. Among the few that have achieved a place in the repertoire, the colourful
ballet Fall River Legend - here given in its full ballet format - has
a rather gruesome backdrop of murder, the story of the perpetrator retold in
musically graphic terms. It was to prove a turning point in Gould's career that
now concentrated on 'serious' music. Completed ten years later, the Jekyll and
Hyde Variations has a theme with 13 quite short variations that move from explosive
outbursts to some quite spooky moments, a little jazz thrown in for good measure.
With so little of Gould's output in catalogue - Jekyll and Hyde making its recording
debut - these well-played performances are most welcome, Kenneth Schermerhorn
perfectly capturing the lilt and pace of the ballet score. Sound quality is
clear and very realistic.
HUMMEL: Cello Sonata in A major, Op. 104. Piano Quartet
on G major, Op. posth. Piano Trio in F major, Op 22. Piano Trio in G major,
Op. 35. Susan Alexander-Max (fortepiano), Micaela Comberti (violin), Simon Standage
(violin), Jane Rogers (viola), Pal Banda (cello). Naxos 8.557694. (69' 19").
Johann Nepomuk Hummel, born in the city now known as Bratislava,
could read music by the age of three and was a prodigy whose achievements surpassed
those of Mozart. The son of an outstanding musician who worked in nearby Vienna,
Johann became a pupil of Mozart, and for a time lived with the composer's family.
By the age of ten Hummel was touring as a concert artist and in demand throughout
Europe. In 1804 he became Kapellmeister to the famous Prince Nikolaus Esterhazy,
and was made assistant to Haydn. They were highly productive years as a composer,
but in 1814 he returned to touring as a concert pianist before taking the position
as Kapellmeister in Weimar, a post that allowed him time to compose. Throughout
his later life Hummel enjoyed such success that his death in 1837 was seen as
a loss at least equal to that of Mozart. History shows how wrong that was, Hummel
being a gifted composer who singularly lacked Mozart's ability to constantly
create memorable melody. The Piano Quartet, published after his death, contains
just two very ordinary movements, and it is the two Piano Trios that are the
gems here. Try track 5 for the joyful final Rondo to opus 35, and you will love
the finale to opus 22 (track 11). Familiar names on the British music scene,
the ensemble shows good taste in period style, and they may well be playing
on period instruments, but the truthful recording finds the fortepiano rather
overpowered in the Quartet, and it sounds much happier in the Trios. All concerned
are admirable, with agility in abundance when requited, Pal Banda's cello singing
eloquently in the sonata.
BOLCOM: Recuerdos. Frescoes. Sonata for two pianos.
Interlude. The Serpent's Kiss. Through Eden's Gates. Elisabeth and Marcel Bergmann
(pianos). Naxos 8.559244. (72' 13").
The world first came to know William Bolcom as a pianist when
he joined the short-lived vogue in the 1960's for Scott Joplin's Piano Rags,
adding many of his own pieces to the deluge of recordings. His musical education
pointed him to a career as a serious composer, student days spent in Paris with
Milhaud and Messiaen as his mentors. It has been while teaching in a number
of American universities, including New York and Washington that he has composed
a substantial catalogue of works covering a broad spectrum of genres. This disc
of piano duets shows both sides of the composer, opening in his world of light
music that sounds rather akin to an American version of Percy Grainger. Then
we reach track 4, War in Heaven, the first of the Frescoes originally
for two pianos, harmonium and harpsichord, the music becomes very modern, and
from therein we are in serious territory as Bolcom flirts with minimalism and
tone clusters in a world of atonality. The Sonata is dramatic and very challenging
to the performers, and throughout the disc the playing is superb, the unanimity
so perfectly co-ordinated. When we reach the final two tracks we are back where
we started in the world of popular music. As a Bolcom piano anthology this disc
is invaluable, but be prepared for some surprises. The sound quality is immediate
and vivid.
VERDI: Four Romanza (1838). Four Romanza (1845). Ave
Maria. Stornello. Ad una srella. Il Poveretto. La seduzione. Chi I bei di m'adduce
ancora. L'esule. Brindisi. Dennis O’Neill (tenor), Ingrid Surgenor (piano).
Naxos 8.557778. (57' 22").
We rarely hear the substantial group of songs composed by Verdi
early in his career and which predate his most famous operas. In truth they
do not sound particularly like Verdi, and could well have come from one of many
opera composers of the era, and follow much in line with Bellini. Maybe Verdi
had the female voice in mind, most of the previous recordings having come from
sopranos, the music too often taking a tenor far past the comfort zone, and
calling upon the heroic part of the voice. Dennis O'Neill has been a very familiar
figure in opera houses in the UK, his Italian style of singing quite rare among
British tenors. Here he surmounts the high tessitura by using a head tone, his
intense tonal quality very suitable to the predominantly serious nature of the
music, though I enjoy the disc far more when O'Neill delights us with the cheerfulness
of Stornello and Lo spazzacamino. He is well accompanied by Ingrid
Surgenor, the disc originally recorded for the Collins label in the 1990's having
a pleasing sound.
PRAETORIUS: Come, thou Redeemer of the earth. RODNEY
BENNETT: Out of your sleep. TAVENER: The Lamb. WEIR: Illuminare,
Jerusalem. WILLCOCKS: O come, all ye faithful. BACH: Sinfonia
from Cantata BWV 42. Kyrie from Mass in G, Herr der du stark und machtig bist;
Jesus bleibet meine Freude. HANDEL: Excerpts from Messiah. LOWELL-MASON
(arr. RUTTER): Joy to the world.
Sara Macliver (soprano), Winchester College
Chapel Choir, Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra, William Lacey (conductor).
Naxos 8.557965. (67' 21").
Over the next few works audiences throughout the UK will be
flocking to programmes just like this one, the whole evening something of a
ritual where the listener is not at all bothered about a few frayed edges in
the performances providing all the expected favourites are there. This new disc
has come from such an occasion - though presumably in Hong Kong - applause punctuating
the recording. So it will be most welcomed, and I know you will enjoy the silvery
voice of Sara Macliver who sings the Messiah extracts with such constant beauty.
Of course we don't expect any period authenticity at such events and we don't
get any, but there is plenty of enthusiasm from the Winchester choir, and it
is good to have Tavener's The Lamb to bring a modern slant to the programme.
There are a few extraneous noises, but it is an atmospheric setting in a big
location. A pleasing present for Christmas.
BALAKAUSKAS: Symphonies Nos. 4 and 5. Romualdas Staskus
(oboe), Igor Kramarev (trumpet), Lithuanian National Symphony Orchestra, Juozas
Domarkas (conductor). Naxos 8.557605. (63' 12).
Born in Lithuania in 1937, Osvaldas Balakauskas having graduated
from the Vilnius Pedagogical Institute in 1961 went on to Kiev Conservatory
to study with Boris Lyatoshinsky in 1969. He has since become one of his country's
leading composers with a large and fast growing catalogue of works, mainly in
the field of orchestral scores. He has developed a style of composition that
he has called, 'dodecatonic', a name that in a nutshell describes the formation
of new tonal relationships governed by serial strictures. So much for words,
but what of the music? To the innocent ear it conjures up a kaleidoscope where
you can see ever changing sound colours often reflecting in one another. Those
colours are regulated by rhythmic patterns that have been predetermined yet
seemingly in free flow. It is a strange world of tonality where traditional
melodic invention plays no part, yet the music is unwilling to go down the path
of pure atonality. The three movements of the Fourth Symphony, which dates from
1998, are generally of a peaceful nature and are in direct contrast with the
energy and high impact of the Fifth's outer movement. The composer's interest
in jazz surfaces in the second movement, the more relaxed mode of the third
leading to a hyperactive and noisy finale. Do start with the Fourth that is
easy to make contact, though I found the Fifth at times hard going. Never having
heard the music before I take the performances at face value, the sound quality
being rather dense.
CASSADO: Dance of the Green Devil. POPPER: Fantasy
on Little Russian Songs. Serenade. BACH: Suite No. 3 - Aria. SCHUBERT:
Standchen. FRANZ ANTON SCHUBERT: Bagatelles - Die Biene. GRANADOS:
Goyescas - Intermezzo. SHOSTAKOVICH: Gadfly - Tarantella. RAVEL:
Rhapsody Espagnole - Habanera. DEBUSSY: Preludes - The Girl
with the Flaxen Hair. SENAILLE: Allegro Spiritoso. VIEUXTEMPS: Etudes
- Canilena. BARCHET: Boulevard de Garavan. OFFENBACH: Danse Bohemienne.
RACHMANINOV: Songs , Op.30 - Vocalise. GERSHWIN: Short Story.
Maria Kliegel (cello), Raimund Havenith (piano). Naxos 8.557943. (75' 12").
There was a time when touring virtuosos titillated their audience
with a series of lollypops that displayed their technical brilliance. Musically
they may not have added up to much, but they appealed to an audience that modern
instrument recitals are simply ignoring. Very often they borrowed from piano
pieces that would have found their way into the home through talented members
of the family, as is often the case in this programme. Now they sometimes crop
up as encores, but have otherwise died from the repertoire. It is good that
Naxos's house cellist, Maria Kliegel is bringing them back again for our amusement.
Some are quite substantial in length, Popper's Fantasy being a twelve
minute mix of lyricism and technical pyrotechnics, Bach's famous Aria and Schubert's
Standchen acting as a foil to the colourful Intermezzo from Granados's
Goyescas and Ravel's Habanera. Kliegel plays them all to the manner
born, silky smoothness mixed with spiky brilliance, her accompanist Raimund
Havenith providing very positive support in a nicely balanced sound. The recording
has been around for quite a few years on the Marco Polo label, which was a strange
place to find a disc aimed at the popular market. So sit back, relax and let
it all flow over you.
ELGAR: Variations on an Original Theme, 'Enigma', Op.
36. Pomp and Circumstance Marches Nos.1 - 5, Op. 39.Cockaigne Overture, Op.
40 (including an 'accidental' stereo tack of part of Cockaigne). Royal Albert
Hall Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Edward Elgar
(conductor). Naxos Historical 8.111022. (67' 43").
There was a time when Elgar's fast tempos were attributed to
his practical need to fit the music into the short timeframe of disc sides.
Then a detailed survey turned that upside-down when it showed some of his most
mercurial tempos occurred on sides that were short measure. So we now accept
these performances were his original intentions and many conductors slavishly
follow. Of course that would eliminate such Elgar champions as Boult and Barbirolli
who often used very expansive speeds. Far better we accept that there are many
ways in which to interpret masterpieces, Elgar's approach being one of many.
Certainly he calls for considerable virtuosity from his musicians, and the fact
that they sometimes stumble is of little consequence in such vivid and virile
performances. The Pomp and Circumstance Marches have tremendous swagger, and
his Cockaigne shows London buzzing with vitality and flamboyance. We
have thankfully passed through a period when it became fashionable to take the
slow sections of the Enigma Variations at snails pace, but basically Elgar's
performance shows that the approach to the score has changed little over the
years. The quality of playing is often staggeringly good, the BBC Symphony brass
in superb form for Cockaigne, while the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra gives
a lovingly detailed Enigma. Many transfers of Elgar conducting Elgar have been
made over the years as technology has improved, but none have quite achieved
this level of excellence. The people at Naxos seem to have mastered the art
of removing surface hiss and clicks without stripping away the upper frequencies,
and you will read the booklet to discover how Elgar to recording in stereo.
So if you already have and treasure these performances on CD, go out and buy
this disc for a new experience.
BEETHOVEN: Fidelio. Martha Modl (Leonora), Wolfgang
Windgassen (Florestan), Gottlob Frick (Rocco), Otto Edelmann (Don Pizzaro),
Sena Jurinac (Marzelline), Rudolf Schock (Jaquino), Alfred Poell (Don Fernando),
Vienna State Opera Chorus, Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Wilhelm Furtwangler
(conductor). Naxos Historical 8.111020-21 (2CDs). (134' 04").
A landmark recording when first issued in 1953, the cast just
about the best that could have been assembled at the time, with the most highly
regarded Beethoven conductor at the helm. The result was a performance that
burned with passion from the outset with a tempestuous overture, Furtwangler
often driving the Vienna orchestra to the point where it seemed technically
stretched. By finding plenty of good humour in the score he contrasted the agony
of Leonora who has arrived with a crazy plan to rescue her beloved Florestan.
Martha Modl has had her many critics, and her intonation was certainly uneven,
while the rather matronly voice low in the register was not best suited to the
impetuous young woman, though her feeling for the music tends to balance drawbacks.
Gottlob Frick made a real life character of Rocco, his nicely focussed bass
voice a joy to hear. Wolfgang Windgassen was a lyric Florestan who at the appropriate
points could sound heroic, and among the remaining cast members Sena Jurinac's
Marzelline is a particular treasure. But the reason for buying the release rests
with Furtwangler's reading of the score as a philosophical utterance, everything
falling into place with that feel of inevitability. After the rather cramped
sound in the overture the quality is acceptable, the voices placed well forward
as was the style at the time, though it must be said that technically it was
not remarkable at the time of issue.
BACH: Italian Concerto in F major, BWV 971. Chromatic
Fantasy and Fugue in D minor, BWV 903. Goldberg Variations, BWV 988. Wanda Landowska
(harpsichord). Naxos Historical 8.110313. (72' 33").
Last month Naxos issued a disc of harpsichord 'bon-bons' played
by Wanda Landowska, the Polish-born pianist who was largely responsible for
re-establishing the harpsichord in the modern concert hall. Born in 1879, she
had come to recognise that piano performances of 17th and 18th century music
were incorrect and needed to return to the harpsichord. To overcome the complaint
that in large modern concert venues the instrument sounded insipid, she commissioned
Pleyel to make her a large two-manual instrument that could be heard in such
surroundings, and slowly audiences came to accept that it shed new light on
music from that period. There was also a small brigade of harpsichordists who
criticised her new instrument as overblown, and Landowska was certainly a robust
performer, as this disc shows. If at times her choice of tempos have been questioned,
and the interpretations were touched by someone who had come from the Romantic
era, the Bach that we hear on this generously filled disc is always alive and
never lacking in interest. Today's purists will find phrases wrapped in small
parcels at the expense of overall shape, and our pleasure comes in the virility
of the fast passages and the clarity of her playing. As an example of the outgoing
style sample track 22 - the 16th Goldberg Variation. Naxos's restoration is
admirable.
GERSHWIN: I'll build a stairway to paradise. Swanee.
Fascinating Rhythm. Someone to watch Over Me. Oh Kay! - Medley. 'S Wonderful.
The Man I love. Liza. Strike up the Band. I got Rhythm. Embraceable you. Bidin'
my time. My Cousin in Milwaukee. Mine. It ain't necessarily so. Summertime.
Nice work if you can get it. Love walked in. They can't take that away from
me. Rhapsody in Blue. Various artists. Naxos Nostalgia 8.120828. (62' 18").
Strange to start a disc called 'Songs of Gershwin' with a track
whose shortcoming is the lack of a voice, but from therein it showcases some
of the most popular vocalists in the 1930's and 40's including Bing Crosby,
Al Jolson, Judy Garland, Ethel Meriman, Fred Astaire and Billie Holliday. It
is a list that points to a very mixed approach, and generally we are a million
miles away from their original use in Gershwin's musicals or today's late night
cabaret view of Gershwin. In fact to modern ears the arrangements will sound
distinctly unusual, swinging jazz instrumental tracks being the disc's main
feature. But these are some of the recordings that helped to make Gershwin popular,
and if you like the solo line-up don't hesitate, the transfers are immaculate,
and the volume between tracks is well balanced.
KOMZAK: Blonde Madchen Walzer. Caraffa Marsch. Warschauer
Madin Walzer. Kaiser Marsch. Die Muhle am Bach. Petite Valse. Obstructions Polka.
Moldauwellen Walzer. Sub Rosa Polka Mazurka. Maiblumchen, Polka francaise. Feldzeugmeister
von Kuhn. Rabin Libejic, Polka francaise. Dein Gedenk Walzer. Slovak Radio Symphony
Orchestra, Christian Pollack. Marco Polo 8.225327. (73' 12").
Today's lack of performances of Karel Komzak's music is most
strange, this disc reinforcing his place among the finest of the highly gifted
composers that made Vienna the dance capital of Europe. Born in Prague in 1850
and following in his father's footsteps as a conductor and composer, his music
was often more complex in its structure than that coming from the Strauss dynasty.
His waltzes were cast in a number of sections that often extended past ten minutes,
the vivacious Blonde Madchen, that opens the disc, being a most engaging
score. Like his father he was also for a time a military bandmaster which gave
his marches a swagger, while his polka's tended to bounce along with considerable
happiness, the Maiblumchen surely as attractive as any composed. Heard
in these nicely paced accounts from that master of Viennese lilt, Christian
Pollack, only adds to the puzzle of Komzak's neglect, all of mthe works on the
disc seemingly otherwise unobtainable. The Slovak Radio orchestra is in superb
form, the playing so crisp and neat, while the sound engineers have provided
the impact the music needs. Fervently recommended.
KOPPEL: Flute Concerto, op. 87a. Cello Concerto, op.
56. Piano Concerto No.2. Rune Most (flute), Michaela Fukacova (cello), Ulrich
Stoerk (piano), Odense Symphony Orchestra, Paul Mann (conductor). Dacapo 8.226032.
(78' 17").
Of Polish parentage, Herman Koppel was born in Copenhagen in
1908, the family becoming one of the most familiar names in Danish music. Spending
early years as a concert pianist and a leading accompanist, his interest in
composing was influenced by the music of Bartok, Stravinsky and Nielsen. It
was, however, his escape to Sweden from the advancing German invasion that concentrated
his attention on writing music, and though he was to become Professor of Piano
Studies at the Copenhagen Conservatoire in 1955, it was his work in every genre
of composition by which he is now remembered. The earliest work on the disc
is the Second Piano Concerto dating from 1938, a score that Koppel discarded
after its first performance, but in the last few years of its life accepted
it back into his output, this recording being the score's second performance.
It is a child of its time, with those catchy rhythms that were in vogue, the
opening movement a spin-off from the big Romantic era concertos. At the heart
of the concerto is a premonition of the war about to come, before we move back
to the mood of the first movement. Fourteen years later saw the first performance
of the Cello Concerto, again in the conventional three movements, and one of
those scores that seem intent on creating intonation problems for the soloist,
from which the technically brilliant Michaela Fukacova is not always immune.
One would say its outer movements owed something to Shostakovich's first cello
concerto if it had not predated the Russian score, the first movement cadenza
an extrovert demonstration of virtuosity. Another nineteen years passed before
the Flute Concerto, a short modern score with lean orchestral accompaniment,
exploring the flute's agility and its silvery tones. The whole CD shows Koppel
as a major player in 20th century music, the performances highly persuasive
with the recording pushing forward the three soloists.
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