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David's
Review Corner - October 2005
MOZART: Requiem;
Inter natos mulierum – Offertory, K.72; Misericordias Domini – Offertory, K.
222. Miriam Allan (soprano), Anne Buter (mezzo), Marcus Ullmann (tenor), Martin
Snell (bass), Gewandhaus Chamber Choir, Leipzig Chamber Orchestra, Morten Schuldt-Jensen
(conductor). Naxos 8.557728. (52' 19").
Mozart's Requiem featured
among Naxos's early releases in a likeable account conducted the Zdenek Kosler
with a fine group of soloists. Time and recording techniques have moved on,
and it is now replaced by a new performance available in surround-sound technology.
It has again opted for a 'traditional' approach distancing itself from those
who are offering period authenticity without having a clue as to the style of
singing used in Mozart's day, simply ignoring that factor to give the solo roles
to the most marketable singers they can find. Morten Schuldt-Jensen uses unhurried
tempos that allow his singers to sympathetically shape their phrases in accord
with the text. The are essentially a lyric group, with Miriam Allan's soprano
just adding a hint of brightness to her tone. I suppose we can best describe
they as a team, for I do not particularly remember individual contributions.
The choir sound is of ample proportions with a nice warm quality and impeccably
trained intonation, the chamber orchestra using dynamics to fully support and
complement the singers. There are so many recordings already in the catalogue
that choice is difficult, though I would place this among my short list of preferred
'traditional' versions. Two fillers seem to have been used just to give the
disc a respectable total time. I have only heard the standard disc, but it is
also available in SACD (6.110116) and DVD-A (5.110116).
LUTOSLAWSKI: Twenty
Polish Christmas Carols. Five Songs. Lacrimosa. Olga Pasichnyk (soprano), Jadwiga
Rappe (soprano)), Polish Radio Chorus, Cracow, Polish National Radio Symphony
Orchestra (Katowice), Antoni Wit (conductor). Naxos 8.555994 (54' 20").
The Polish Christmas Carols
must be one of the most beautiful choral works of the 20th century. Witold Lutoslawski's
gift of attractive and colourful melody comes down his line of teachers from
Rimsky-Korsakov, adding some piquant modern harmonies. It is scored for soprano
and children's voices, the text of telling the story of the birth of Jesus in
a series of carols that are quite short. The original was for voices and piano
and dates from 1946, as if Lutoslawski wanted to compose something of innocence
to offset the evil of the war that had just ended. It is here performed with
orchestral accompaniment that captures the mood of the biblical scene.
We revert to the Lutoslawski we more readily recognise with the Five Songs dating
from 1958 and scored for soprano and 30 instruments. It came twelve years later,
the songs forming musically graphic pictures of the text by Illakowicz, and
cover subjects as diverse as a stormy wind and an icy-cold winter. This is volume
9 of the composer's orchestral works, a series that has proved to be one of
the most resplendent jewels in the Naxos crown. The performances have been exemplary
and here they continue in that mould with children's voices of the most exquisite
quality, their intonation beyond question, a feature shared by the bright and
pure soprano voice of Olga Pasichnyk in the carols. Excellent orchestral playing
and superb sound quality.
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Songs
of Travel. The House of Life. Linden Lea. Four Poems by Fredegrond Shove. Roderick
Williams (baritone), Iain Burnside (piano). Naxos 8.557643. (67' 04").
Roderick Williams is the
new generation of great exponents of English song, his voice so perfectly focused,
his diction beyond criticism, and above all he has an innate feel for the music
that very few have ever possessed. Vaughan Williams achieved a perfect fusion
of words and music, the lyric quality of the vocal line complemented by an accompaniment
that graphically comments on the text. But, like most other English song composers
of the 20th century, he had a special vocal timbre in his mind that locked him
into the breed of his native singers. In essence they were German Lieder transferred
into a British idiom, each cycle exploring many different aspects of life, though
death and love are often the topic. His best known is The Songs of Travel,
Roderick Williams launching into The Vagabond with his warm and fulsome
voice, the dynamic range taking him to the most hushed and floated pianissimos
he uses so effectively in the fourth song, Youth and Love. In fact I
would exhaust superlatives to describe the disc, not least on Iain Burnside's
accompaniment, for even by his exalted standards this is very special. Every
note is crystal clear, perfectly matching Williams' shaping of phrases, both
performers meticulous in everything they do, with note values observed to a
level of perfection that is extremely rare. All of this is contained in a sound
that must be regarded among the finest in the song repertoire, the piano uncannily
realistic. Without doubt this will be my vocal disc of the year.
RUBBRA: Violin Concerto
in A major, Op. 103. Improvisation, Op.89. Improvisation on Virginal Pieces
by Giles Farnaby, Op. 50. Krysia Osostowicz (violin), Ulster Orchestra, Takuo
Yuasa (conductor). Naxos 8.557591. (57' 02").
Why do we not hear Rubbra's
Violin Concerto as part of every major soloist's repertoire? That is the enigma
that surrounds his whole output. Born in 1901, Edmund Rubbra was a highly gifted
pupil of Holst, and much influenced by Ireland and Bax, the initial critical
acclaim of his output never converted into a lasting presence on the concert
platform. The concerto is a score that can stand among the great violin compositions
of the 20th century, an English version of the Prokofiev concertos springing
to mind. The two composers share a passion for sending the violin flying on
high, as if a bird were singing to an orchestral accompaniment. It could never
enjoy a more passionate performer than Krysia Osostowicz, her spotless intonation
in the upper stratospheres matched by the silvery quality of her playing in
the central Poema, a movement that here grows to an impassioned central point.
The finale is full of action and calls on the soloist for a display of glittering
brilliance. The best known of Rubbra's works, the Farnaby improvisations, is
a lightweight and highly pleasurable modern pastiche on music by the 16th century
composer, Rubbra working much in the mode of Vaughan Williams. I had never heard
the opus 89 Improvisation before and it may well be its first recording. A rhapsodic
score for violin and orchestra it appears to have been Rubbra's first thoughts
on a violin concerto. These are first class performances in every way, and are
offered in exemplary sound. At this very low price I hope it will spark a revival
in Rubbra's fortunes and I fervently commend it to anyone even remotely interested
in 20th century music.
SCHUMAN: Symphonies
Nos. 7 & 10. Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz (conductor). Naxos
8.559255. (60' 46").
If you started this disc
at the final track, the third movement of the Tenth symphony, you could sit
back convinced that this would be a disc of easy enjoyment. The catchy rhythms,
brilliant orchestration and high-octane impact all look to a mainstream masterpiece
from the 20th century. But nothing is quite straightforward with William Schuman,
his music so wide ranging in style and content you never quite know what to
expect. Go back to the Seventh Symphony and you find music that you will probably
have to play several times before you get to grips with the stylistic idiom.
Born in 1910, Schuman became the most influential person in American music during
the second half of the 20th century, his appointment as President of the Juilliard
School of Music and President of the Lincoln Centre for Performing Arts, giving
him enormous power in New York’s music. Having started out as a composer of
songs, his later output was mainly symphonic and enjoyed success in the concert
hall but seldom appeared on disc. The Seventh and Tenth date from 1960 and 1975
and are basically tonal, the Seventh having massive dynamic and mood swings,
with sadness permeating the sombre third movement for strings, and a volatile
finale for full orchestra. The Tenth, subtitled 'American Muse' is unrestrained
in outer movements that encapsulate a contemplative central Larghissimo. The
recordings were originally released on the Delos label and are everything the
music needs - a brilliant orchestral sound; a conductor who understands the
music and engineers who have ideally captured the music's vast dynamic range.
Make no mistake this is important 20th century music perfectly served by the
performers.
ADAMS: I was looking
at the Ceiling and then I saw the Sky. Martina Muhlpointner (Consuelo), Kimako
Xavier Trotman (Dewain), Markus Alexander Neisser (Rick), Jeannette Friedrich
(Leila), Darius de Haas (David), Lilith Gardell (Tiffany), Jonas Holst (Mike),
Young Opera Company Freiburg, The Band of Holst-Sinfonietta, Klaus Simon (conductor).
Naxos 8.669003-04 (2CDs). (115' 55").
John Adams, Philip Glass
and Steve Reich have been the leading figures in the development of Minimalism,
though by the 1980's Adams had distanced himself from the pure form of that
style. Two operas, Nixon in China and The Death of Klinghoffer,
established him as a major opera composer, Minimalism mixed with the melodic
conventions of vocal writing that came from both past and present. Another change
came in 1995 when he began work on I was looking at the Ceiling and then
I saw the Sky, a score that owes more to 'pop' music and Broadway than the
classic world of opera. There is an element of Kurt Weill's cutting satire on
modern society; a follow up to Bernstein's West Side Story; a little
influence from Stephen Sondheim all mixed with classical rock, progressive jazz
and a return to minimalist repetition to hammer home the point. It is all used
to capture a story of racial tensions in Los Angeles after the 1994 earthquake,
and pictures the crooked society that exists in the States. Built from a series
of show songs without the usual opera convention of thematic growth, it is,
as you would expect from Adams, full of catchy numbers that immediately burn
into your memory, such as Leila's Song (track 14, disc 1), a slow seductive
number. The singers, probably with a 'pop' background, are recorded very forward
of the accompaniment - which often comes from electronic keyboards - so that
you never miss a word. The acoustic is very tight and dry in the best 'pop'
music traditions. It may not belong to opera as we know it, but it is interesting.
RESPIGHI: Variazioni
Sinfoniche. Suite in E major. Preludio, Corale e Fuga. Ouverture Carnevalesca.
Burlesca. Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Adriano (conductor). Naxos 8.557820.
(78' 58").
At the end of the 1980's
the Marco Polo record label embarked on a series of Respighi recordings that
introduced many items new to the disc catalogue. It was at a time when little
was known of his output save for his famous Festivals, Pines and Fountains
of Rome, though he had been a highly productive composer. Basic though it
may be, one of Respighi's problems was his dreadful choice of title, as you
would hardly expect the Preludio, Corale e Fuga to be a tuneful and lightweight
score more readily associated with ballet. It comes from his student days in
St. Petersburg where he financially supported his studies by playing in the
theatre orchestra. The charming Suite was composed in the same year, 1901, and
has the influence of Tchaikovsky's ballets that Respighi was probably playing
in the orchestra pit. There are passing moments when the Slovak orchestra shows
they were on unfamiliar ground, but Adriano obviously loved the scores and together
with his musicians communicates that affection to the listener. With the present
renewed interest in the composer, it is obviously time to reissue the performances
on the less expensive and more readily available Naxos label. It's a real charmer.
BAUER: A Lament
on an African Theme, Op. 20a (orch. Martin Bernstein). Concertino for oboe,
clarinet and string quartet, Op. 32b. Trio Sonata, Op. 40. Symphonic Suite for
Strings, Op. 33. Duo for oboe and clarinet, Op. 25. Piano Concerto, Op. 36,
'American Youth'. Jeremy Polmear (oboe), Eli Eban (clarinet), Jonathan Snowden
(flute), Judith Herbert (cello) Diana Ambache (piano), Ambache Chamber Orchestra.
Naxos 8.559253. (58' 42").
Marion Bauer was born in
the United States in 1897, her mature musical studies taking place in Paris
and Berlin where her teachers included Boulenger and Ertel. On her return home
she entered into a career as a teacher, first at New York University and later
at the Juilliard School of Music. The present disc is an overview of her output
of orchestral and chamber works, easily accessible, strongly melodic and very
well constructed, its roots firmly planted before the Second Viennese brigade
arrived on the scene. The Symphonic Suite for Strings, dating from 1940, had
stylistically not moved far forward from Elgar's Serenade for Strings, written
fifty years earlier, and there is much to link the gentle lyric aspects of the
Piano Concerto with composers as far back as MacDowell. It is in the Duo for
oboe and clarinet, composed in the 1930's, that we find evidence of Bauer experimenting
with music of greater pungency that does toy with atonality. I greatly enjoyed
the atmospheric Lament on an African Theme, my ears particularly attracted
to the Concertino, its pastoral qualities related to English composers of the
time. Apart from an under-powered orchestral finale to the Piano Concerto, the
performances are persuasive and serve the music well. The engineers having provided
a safe and warm sound.
PITIELD Piano Concertos
Nos. 1 & 2. Air and Variations (The Oak and the Ash). Studies on an English
Dance Tune. Toccata. Xylophone Sonata. Peter Donohoe (piano), Anthony Goldstone
(piano), Royal Northern College of Music Orchestra, Andrew Penny (conductor).
Naxos 8.557291. (54' 38").
Thomas Pitfield never quite
made up his mind whether he wanted to be an artist or a musician, his problem
being that he was highly gifted in both. Born in the industrial heartland of
northern England, he studied at the Royal Manchester College of Music (now the
Royal Northern College of Music), and later returned there as the professor
of composition for a twenty-six year period from 1947-73. Continuing in a melodic
mode that goes back to English music at the turn of the century, the First Piano
Concerto has a nice sense of vitality in the outer movements. I don't know of
the aegis of the Second, but its two very short movements would suggest an unfinished
score. I find the exuberant Air and Variations on the traditional song, The
Oak and the Ash, a wonderfully inventive and engaging piece. It provides
an ideal vehicle for Peter Donohoe's nimble fingers, and throughout the disc
the sheer clarity of his playing makes you sit up and take notice that he remains
one of the great pianists of our time. Anthony Goldstone gives an attractive
account of the First. The remaining part of the disc is given to piano solos,
and here we find Pitfield's inventiveness taking tonal music into a quasi-atonal
format, intriguing, great fun and at times staggeringly difficult. For sheer
mind-blowing virtuosity go to the brief track 16, a study in octaves. Donohoe
reminds us in the Xylophone Sonata that as a student he was also a highly gifted
percussionist who was often seen as an 'extra' in major UK orchestras. With
Pitfield's connection with the RNCM it was appropriate to inviting the current
college orchestra to take part, conducted by another college product, Andrew
Penny. There are passing moments of fruity intonation, but they accompany with
good spirit.
IFUKUBE: Sinfonia
Tapkaara. Ritmica Ostinata. Symphonic Fantasy No. 1. Ekaterina Saranceva (piano),
Russian Philharmonic Orchestra, Dmitri Yablonsky (conductor). Naxos 8.557587.
(60' 43").
The life of the Japanese
composer, Akira Ifukube, was certainly unusual, the first ten years of his working
life spent as a forestry engineer having graduated in that faculty at the Imperial
University. In those years he was also developing his skills as a composer,
his first ballet premiered when he was twenty-two and heard in Vienna two years
later. His career having been interrupted by the Second World War, five major
ballets were composed in quick succession in the six years from 1948 before
devoting his life to symphonic works. The three contrasted movements of the
Sinfonia Tapkaara date from 1954, their content a fusion of Japanese influences
and West European orchestration. Maybe the central movement lacks that depth
of emotion Western composers use at that point, and Ifukube is generally happier
when bright rhythms take over, the pounding music of the finale is strong and
attention catching. Ritmica Ostinata, written seven years later, introduces
a solo piano, the repetitive mode coming close to the Minimalist composers.
By far the most immediately attractive work comes with the Symphonic Fantasy,
the incessant opening rhythm giving way to a tuneful central section that in
mood has strong links with Hollywood, the third part being aggressive. The performances
sound very convincing.
HAYDN:
Symphonies Nos. 1 - 5. Sinfonia Finlandia, Patrick Gallois (conductor).
Naxos 8.557571. (71' 36").
We seem to be nearing the
conclusion of the complete cycle of Haydn symphonies on Naxos, which will be
only the second time this has been achieved on one label. The series is now
in that era when the date of composition is unclear, but show Haydn taking symphonic
form one gentle step forward from the Italian style of 'sinfonia' that acted
as opera overtures. All are in the major key and scored for strings and pairs
of oboes and horns and probably intended for around ten or twelve players. The
movements generally alternate between fast and slow - Haydn experimenting with
some unexpected dynamics in the central movement of the Fourth, with the Third
and Fifth changing the format with the introduction of an additional Minuet.
The Sinfonia Finlandia have the lean quality of period instruments, the horns
quite pungent and allowed to dominate, bringing character as they duet with
the oboes, a device particularly used in the third movement of the Third symphony.
Intonation is spotlessly clean, even when Patrick Gallois employs very brisk
tempos in the outer movements to put the strings to test. The opening of the
Fourth is a good sampling point for the disc in general (track 11). Reverberation
magnifies the sound and slightly blurs articulation in fast passages.
PAVLOVA: Symphonies
Nos. 2 & 4. Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra of Moscow Radio, Vladimir Fedoseyev
(conductor). Naxos 8.557566. (57' 31").
Reviewing the previous
disc of two Alla Pavlova symphonies issued on Naxos a couple of years ago, I
concluded with the question, " who musically is Alla Pavlova?", the
total contrast between the two works leaving me grasping for an artistic character.
This present disc gets me no closer. Born in Russia in 1952, she studied at
the Gnesin Academy of Music in Moscow before working as a composer in Sofia
and Moscow. Moving to New York in 1990, she became a member of the New York
Women Composers group, and it is her new life that has brought the Second and
Fourth symphonies. As with the previous disc the music oscillates between a
melodic and readily attractive idiom, not too far distant from Hollywood in
its scoring, and an aggressive idiom that has Khachaturian lurking in the background.
Cast in four movements, the second being a short and uneasy scherzo, the Second
symphony with the subtitle Towards a New Millennium is redolent in colour
and with an oriental flavour to the melodic input. The sentimental slow movement
harks back to a previous era, and that mood goes through to a finale ending
in peace. With the massive organ statement that opens the Fourth, my thoughts
turn to the film of Dracula, but we are told that the score "depicts the
composer’s own path of spiritual development – visually captured by the painting
‘Path to Shambala’ by Nicholas Roerich". The power eventually gives way
to a long lyric section with an extended violin solo bringing the 20-minute
work to a close. The playing is persuasive, and if you like symphonic film music
you should hasten to buy this. I enjoyed it, and the sound quality is fine.
ENGLISH ANTHEMS &
HYMNS: All people that on earth do dwell. Dear Lord and Father of mankind.
King of glory, King of peace. Ye watchers and ye holy ones. Let all mortal flesh
keep silent. Immortal, invisible, God only wise. All my hope on God is founded.
The Lord’s my shepherd. Tell out, my soul. Christ is made the sure foundation.
Come down, O Love divine. Praise to the Lord. And did those feet in ancient
time (Jerusalem). Abide with me. Alleluya, sing to Jesus! Ye holy angels bright.
My song is love unknown. Holy, holy, holy! Glorious things of thee are spoken.
O for a thousand tongues to sing. Praise, my soul the King of Heaven. O praise
ye the Lord. Marlowe Brass Ensemble, The Choir of St George’s Chapel, Windsor,
Tim Byram-Wigfield (conductor). Naxos 8.557587. (69' 04").
The connection between
Windsor Chapel and the British Royal Family will give this new release a ready
market, the disc setting the scene with trumpets that surround such Royal occasions
bringing a feel of pomp to All people that on earth do dwell. It is a
disc intended to bring comfort to traditionalists, rejecting the trendy brisk
tempos much in fashion. That equally extends to the familiar phrasing that has
become encrusted over the years and would probably have surprised the composers.
Tim Byram-Wigfield uses his singers to create a changing pattern between full
and sectional verses, the organ accompaniment providing positive and often fulsome
support. Long-standing favourites are all here on twenty-two tracks, avoiding
the new melodies loved by a faction in the Church of England, though I would
have welcomed more descants to add piquancy to the performances. Boy trebles
do have some individual intonation ideas, but overall the performances are rock
steady and of pleasing quality.
DUNSTABLE: Quam
pulchra es. Kyrie. Gloria a 4. Credo a 4. Gloria - Jesus Christe Fili Dei.
Sanctus. Credo - Da gaudiorum premia. Sanctus - Da gaudiorum premia Agnus Dei
- Veni Sancte Spiritus - Veni Creator. Gloria in canon. Tonus Peregrinus, Anthony
Pitts (conductor). Naxos 8.557341. (70' 06").
Or should it be John Dunstaple,
we shall never know, nor will the mystery of how his music arrived in Italy
and Germany be solved, for there is no evidence that he ever ventured to Italy,
and it is presumption that he went with the Duke of Bedford to Germany. It remains
to speculate whether he lived part of his life in France, but for whatever reason
these manuscripts did thankfully survive on those foreign parts as few were
found in his homeland after his death in 1453. He was apparently a highly gifted
man in both science and the arts, his rank in the country as a composer only
known from writings of other eminent musicians. At the same time they did cause
confusion as to his importance, and today we look back at a highly skilled craftsman
who often experimented in unusual harmonic shifts. It was the free flowing tracery
over lower and slower supporting lines that was his innovation at the time,
the Sanctus on track 7 being a good and particularly beautiful example. There
is also an ethereal quality in much that he composed, and you feel he often
had a large building in mind for the music's performance. Dates are unknown,
though it is thought that these surviving scores came from his later years -
he lived till he was 63. The performances from Tonus Peregrinus are very good,
the spicy quality of the male altos bringing a cutting edge to their role, their
combined performance of his best known work, Veni Sanctus Spiritus, being most
convincing. The sopranos are good, floating high passages helped by the resonant
acoustic of the recording venue. Of course we can only guess how they would
have been originally performed, but this will certainly convince and please
modern ears.
TURINA: Sonata romantica
on a Spanish theme Op. 3. Sonata fantasia, Op. 59. Rincon magico, Op. 97. Sonata.
Concierto sin orquesta, Op.88. Jordi Maso (piano). Naxos 8.557438. (67' 45").
Turina was making such
little headway as a musician in Spain that he decided to spend time in Paris
to study both the piano and composition. By the age of thirty-one he had established
a major career in France, and, as is so often the case, was welcomed on his
return to his homeland as one of the country's leading composers. As he was
rather shy, he was more at ease writing piano works than working on the musical
canvass of the symphony orchestra, though it was this field of composition that
made him famous. He wrote piano music throughout his life, dying in 1949 after
a long illness. The present disc, which is the second volume in the complete
Turina keyboard works - contains his three Sonatas composed in a very personal
and Spanish idiom and far from the academic style the title suggests. Structurally
they are very fluid yet never less than engaging, though I must confess I was
expecting some musical fireworks in the Concierto, which is a rather quiet piece.
Most of the items are otherwise unavailable, but in any event you have the feeling
that Maso's performances are 'one-off' events. His feel for the idiom and his
lovingly shaped phrases bring the music to life, the clarity and razor-sharp
precision of his playing creating a glittering quality. Try track 5 as a sample
of his brilliance. He is blessed with some of the most realistic piano recording
I have ever heard.
GRANDJANY: Fantasy
on a theme of Haydn, Op. 31. TOURNIER: Vers la source dans le bois. ROTA:
Sarabanda e Toccata. PIERNE: Impromptu-Caprice, Op.9. FALLA: La
Vida Breve - Spanish Dance No.1. FAURE: Impromptu, Op.86. Une Chatelaine
en sa tour, Op. 110. MURPHY: Harp Concerto ‘And then at night I paint
the stars’ – III: Scintillation (Cadenza). PROKOFIEV: Prelude in C major,
Op. 12 No.7. SALZEDO: Ballade, Op. 28. Judy Loman (harp). Naxos 8.554561.
(59' 23").
A nicely varied and popular
selection of harp 'lollypops', the music tending to fall into the instrument's
usual role of a sparkling melody accompanied by rippling backdrops. With such
a large repertoire to chose from, I don’t quite see the point of including a
harp arrangement of Falla's Spanish Dance from the opera La Vida Breve,
or the Prokofiev Prelude, particularly as the other tracks are original pieces
for the instrument. Gabriel Pierne's much performed Impromptu is one of the
most intensely beautiful harp pieces ever conceived, and comes after the rather
ordinary work by Nino Rota. Loman ideally shapes the two Faure items, the full
extent of her brilliance saved until the end with a really stunning performance
of Salzedo's Ballade, a work that has almost become mandatory to all solo harpists.
Microphones have been placed quite close so as not to blur the fast running
passages, the result is a most realistic sound.
REGER: Choral fantasia
on "Alle Menschen muessen sterben", Op 52. Six Trios, Op. 47. Canon
in E major. Gigue in D minor. Kanzonetta in A minor. Scherzo in A Major. Siciliano
in E Minor. Fugue in C Minor. Introduction, Variations and Fugue on an Original
Theme in F sharp minor, Op. 73. Martin Welzel (organ). Naxos 8.557338. (72'
08").
We have reached volume
6 in Naxos's complete organ works of Max Reger and have come to scores that
are rarely heard. He was a composer who knew the instrument from the standpoint
of an outstanding performer, most of his works having been written for his own
use. In style it was a curious mix of the two composers who had stimulated his
early interest in the instrument - Bach and Wagner - a pairing that brought
a strict academic backdrop to frame the romantic quality of his scores. Many
organists regard it as the peak of composition in the late-Romantic era, the
music often laying down a challenge with its complexity and density. The massive
Introduction, Variations and Fugue being a wonderful score that would please
the audience both melodically and in the challenges they know the performer
is facing. It is a major masterpiece to act as a foil to the lightweight Six
Trios whose content includes a busy scherzo where two completely different ideas
seem to be opposing one another, in this performance probably more than Reger
expected. The Second Sonata, dating from 1901, counts among his finest works
in the genre, the imposing score in four movements concluding with a mighty
fugue. I am never quite sure whether I want to hear cycles played by one performer,
or to take the Naxos idea that it is good to have various views of a composer.
Martin Welzel received his musical training in Germany, moving to the United
States to studied with Carole Terry in Seattle. He is technically right on top
of the music's difficulties, though some may wish he had brandished his virtuosity
more openly. The organ at the Trier Cathedral in Germany has been well captured.
WERTHMULLER: Sonata
in A major, Op. 17 (trans. Pfeifer). BACH: Sonata No. 3 in C major, BWV
1005 (trans. Krivokapic). SCARLATTI: Sonata K.162 - Andante. Sonata K.
208 - Andante et cantabile. Sonata K. 209 - Allegro (trans. Marchione). BOGDANOVIC:
Guitar Sonata No. 2. Goran Krivokapic (guitar). Naxos 8.557809. (61'
09").
A guitar disc largely devoted
to music from the Baroque era is a brave choice by the young winner of the 2004
Guitar Foundation of America, with awards in seventeen international competitions
before that. They are, of course, all transcriptions for the modern guitar,
some rather more successful than others. The twenty-six year old Goran Krivokapic
shows a very good response to the period, the trills in the Bach are perfectly
tight, and his phrasing is well thought through. You could, of course take exception
to the Scarlatti harpsichord pieces, the guitar just a pale reflection of the
pungency possible on the keyboard, but as pieces of music they work well enough.
It is the move to original guitar music with the Second Sonata by his compatriot
Yugoslav composer, Dusan Bogdanovic that gives us the real Krivokapic. It is
rather like releasing him from a leash and allowing him to become his own person
with passion, brilliance and technical fluency all on display. It is a superb
work that exploits the instrument's colours, Krivokapic's nimble right hand
bringing a wonderful clarity to the busy pages. Which does bring me back to
my hobbyhorse, Krivokapic being so intense in the Baroque era that his left
hand fingers move so audibly that for long passages we have a noise preceding
every note. Thankfully that largely disappears in the Bogdanovic sonata. But
whatever reservation I have, he is a real discovery that you should hear.
MARTINU: Deux chansons.
Trois melodies. Vocalise-Etude. Dve balady (Two Ballads to Folk Texts). Ctyri
pisne (Four Songs to Folk Texts). Polka and Waltz for piano from the ballet
Spalicek. Three Christmas Songs. Four Children’s Songs and Nursery Rhymes. Koleda
milostna (Love Carol to a Folk Text), Prani mamince (A Wish for a Mother). Olga
Cerna (mezzo-soprano), Jitka Cechova (piano). Naxos 8.557494. (53' 38").
I have never come across
Martinu's songs until I heard this disc, though apparently he wrote over a hundred
throughout most of his productive career, the majority remaining unpublished
at his death. They cover a wide range of subjects from the dramatic to a group
related to children's fun songs, all told in a direct and simplistic way that
is utterly different to the adventurous Martinu we know from his symphonies
and string quartets. Very tuneful, the piano mostly providing little more than
a conventional backdrop to the vocal melody, and they make few demands on the
performers. Olga Cerna has a very distinctive voice that concentrates on clarity
of diction, and maybe it is the recording that smoothes the dynamics. She is
well partnered by Jitka Cechova who adds two piano solos, the little Polka more
characteristic of Martinu. The disc rather has the CD market to itself.
MUSSORGSKY: Kovanschina.
Boris Freitkov (Ivan), Ivan Nechayev (Andrey), Vladimir Ulyanov (Golitsin),
Ivan Shashkov (Shaklovity), Sofia Preobrazhenskaya (Marfa), Mark Reizen (Dosifei),
Nina Serval (Susanna), Yakov Mischenko (Scribe), Valentina Volokitina (Emma),
Kirov Opera Chorus and Orchestra, Boris Khaikin (conductor). Naxos Historical
8.111124-26 (3CDs). (212' 36").
It is the realism of the
sound that first strikes you; the delicate orchestral shades realised in a way
that defies its origins of the war-torn city of Leningrad in 1946. When the
singers enter we do have the forward placing that would have been fashionable
at the time, but as the performance progresses we have all manner of effects
not least the gradual arrival in the march scene. Remembering those gritty surfaces
of my Melodiya pressings that arrived here direct from Russia, this reissue
seems to have come from master tapes so quiet is the background. Of course in
the big moments we lose inner definition, but the overall sound would sit quite
happily on ears brought up in the CD era. Mussorgsky tried to write the text
and music of Khovanshchina as he progressed, and on his death little
was orchestrated and parts had not even been started, Rimsky-Korsakov left to
do both tasks. It was never to achieve a permanent place in the repertoire outside
of Russia, and truth to tell it is a work that opens well but slowly runs out
of inspiration. Yet given a performance of this quality it does rivet our attention,
the fact that it could have been mounted with such excellence so shortly after
a war making it even more remarkable. Today, with the exception of the great
bass, Mark Reizen in the pivotal role of Dosifei, the names of the cast will
mean little, though Sofya Preobrazhenskaya was the leading Russian mezzo of
the time and had made a number of appearances at the Salzburg Festival. Her
excellent singing of Marfa is characteristic of the dark Slav mezzos and vocally
makes an ideal foil to Valentina Volokitina bright soprano as Emma. Boris Freitkov
is an impressive Ivan at the centre of the story, though Ivan Nechayev sounds
very stressed as Andrey. Boris Khaikin had only recently begun his years as
conductor at the Kirov, but he knew his way around the score, shaping every
phrase with affection. I'm not so keen on the additional tracks of Russian opera,
but it’s a matter of taste. The modern Kirov recording with Gergiev at the helm
is mighty attractive, but this older version has an earthy quality that greatly
attracts me.
SCHUMANN: Cello
Concerto in A minor, Op. 29. SAINT-SAENS: Cello Concerto No. 1 in A minor,
Op. 33. Carnival of the Animals - The Swan. RUBINSTEIN Melody, Op. 3
No.1 (arr. Popper). Romance, Op. 44 No. 1. RACHMANINOV: Vocalise, Op.
34 No. 14. RIMSKY-KORSAKOV: Sadko - Song of the Indian Guest. CUI:
Orientale, Op. 50, No.9. TCHAIKOVSKY: Chanson Triste, Op. 40 No.2.
None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No.6. Six Morceaux - Valse sentimental in F
minor, Op. 51, No. 6. SCHUBERT: Moment Musicale, Op. 94, No. 3. WEBER:
Rondo. GRANADOS: Intermezzo. Gregor Piatigorsky (cello), Ralph Berkowitz
(piano), London Philharmonic Orchestra, John Barbirolli (conductor), RCA Victor
Symphony Orchestra, Fritz Reiner (conductor). Naxos Historical 8.111069.
(77' 56').
Born in Russia in 1903,
Gregor Piatigorsky became the leading cellist of his era. He was just twenty-one
when he was appointed principal cellist of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra,
but such was his impact that he decided four years later to devote himself to
a soloist's career striking up a duo partnership with Schnabel, and with Carl
Flesch added for their trio. He made his debut in the States in 1929 and it
was there that he was to spend much of his life, eventually forming a high-profile
trio with Heifetz and Rubinstein. He was not a cellist with that deep-throated
tonal quality we associate with Russia, his silvery quality shimmering in his
quick and pronounced vibrato. Intonation did become questionable as the years
passed, and even as early as the 1934 recording of the Schumann there were problems.
Yet when everything came together, as in the delectable account of the Saint-Saens'
first concerto, he was a most persuasive performer, the accompaniment from the
RCA Victor Symphony sparkling with a light-hearted good humour. Yet his widespread
fame as a recording artist largely rests on his 'lollypops', and in this field
he was excellent, playing them with a profusion of colours that brought them
to life. The recordings date from 1934 to 1950 - a large period of his performing
life - and are of mixed quality, the Naxos restoration team adequately removing
surface noise without a cut-back in frequency range. Not a first choice for
the Schumann but otherwise an admirable historic document.
CILEA: L’Arlesiana
- E' la solita storia, Act 2. PUCCINI: Manon Lescaut - Ah! Manon, mi
tradisce, Act 2. MASCAGNI: Lodoletta - Se Franz dicesse … Ah! ritrovarla,
Act 3. Isabeau - Non colombelle, Act 1; E passera la viva creatura. GIORDANO:
Andrea Chenier - Un di all' azzuro spazio, Act 1. VERDI: La forza del
destino - La vita è inferno; Oh tu che in seno, Act 3. MILITELLO: Ninna
nanna grigioverde. Tenerezza. TAGLIAFERRI: Passione. CIOFFI: Tre
rose. BIZET: Carmen - Quels regards, Votre mere avec moi. NARDELLA:
Surdate. CIOFFI: ’Na sera ’e maggio. VALENTE: Troppo ’nnammurato.
OLIVIERI: Son poche rose.
LEONCAVALLO: Pagliacci
- Si puo (prologue). MILLOCKER: Der Feldprediger - Gluckswalzer. BIXIO:
Cinefollia. Dimmi tu, primavera. Beniamino Gigli (tenor), Rina Gigli (soprano),
La Scala Orchestra, Umberto Berrettoni / Giovanni Militello (conductors). Orchestra,
Dino Olivier (conductor), Prussian State Orchestra, Bruno Seidler-Winkler (conductor),
Orchestra and Chorus of the Rome Opera House, Luigi Ricci (conductor). Naxos
Historical 8.110272. (76' 49").
We have reached the 1940's
in this complete series of Beniamino Gigli recital recordings, by which time
he had realised you have to act with your voice as well as just sing. His detractors
were complaining that he was now crooning his way through the high passages,
and his added acting was to mask the wear and tear on his voice. Both are no
doubt true, but this is the period I enjoy most in his career. There seems much
more involvement in the characters he is portraying while he has found a way
of making popular Neapolitan songs more of an art form. There is one novelty
with the tenor singing the prologue to I Pagliacci (the orchestral part
rather mutilated), and there is the welcome inclusion of his daughter, Rina,
making a brief appearance as Micaela in Bizet's Carmen. She was a soprano
that far from enjoying her father's name seems never to have enjoyed the success
she deserved. The quality of recording from diverse times and recording locations
is remarkably good with the singer placed well forward of the accompaniment.
Orchestras were of mixed quality.
J. S. BACH: Fantasia
in C minor. SCARLATTI: Sonata in D major. Sonata in D minor. CHAMBONNIERS:
Sarabande in D minor. RAMEAU: La Dauphine. Air grave pour deux polonaise.
COUPERIN: Les Barricades Mysterieuses. L’Arlequine. Air dans le gout polonaise.
CROFT (attrib. PURCELL): Ground in C minor. ANON: The Nightingale.
HANDEL: Air and Doubles from Suite No. 5 in E major. MOZART: Rondo
in D major. Rondo alla Turca. Menuet in D major. VIVALDI (trans. J. S. BACH):
Concerto No. 1 in D major. OGINSKI (trans. LANDOWSKA): Polonaise
in A minor. Polonaise in G major. POLONAIS (trans. LANDOWSKA): Gagliarda.
LANDOWSKA: Bouree d’Auvergne. The Hop. CATO (trans. LANDOWSKA): Chorea
Polonica. COUPERIN (trans. LANDOWSKA): Three Polish Dances of the 17th
Century. CHOPIN: Mazurka No. 34 in C major
Wanda Landowska (harpsichord).
Naxos 8.111055. (77' 35").
It is now difficult to
believe that by the beginning of the 20th century the harpsichord had almost
disappeared from concert use. Baroque music was played on the piano, the weak
tonal quality of the harpsichord found to be unsuitable to modern concert halls.
Onto the scene came the Polish born pianist, Wanda Landowska. Born in 1879,
she came to the realisation that her performances of 17th and 18th century music
was incorrect and needed the original harpsichord. She commissioned Pleyel to
make her a large two-manual instrument that could be heard in modern surroundings,
and slowly audiences came to accept the 'new' sounds. Even then the small brigade
of harpsichordists criticised her for the 'overblown' sound of her instrument,
but more or less single-handed she brought the instrument back to popularity.
By today's sterilised standards her playing will appear mannered, her tempos
often taken to extremes and phrasing very much her own. Her Scarlatti is big-boned;
her Couperin charming, with Handel stylistically well considered. There is some
pretty heavy 'rumble' in the background of some tracks that the restoration
engineers could not remove without affecting the gusty lower end of her instrument.
So this is where the revival started. Hear it for it tells you a great deal
about the music.
FOERSTER: Eva. Iveta
Jirikova (Eva), Kostyantyn Andreyev (Manek), Denisa Hamarova (Mesjanovka),
Igor Tarasov (Samko), Elizabeth Batton (Zuzka), Roland Davitt (Rabac), The Wexford
Festival Opera Chorus, Cracow Philharmonic Orchestra, Jaroslav Kyzlink (conductor).
Marco Polo 8.225308-09. (2CDs). (113' 46").
The plot for Josef Foerster's
Eva would have been ideal for Janacek. The seamstress, Eva, escapes from
a desperately unhappy marriage to become the mistress of Manek. They leave their
Czech village to work on a farm in Austria and life for both is blissful until
Manek's mother catches up with them, and persuades her weak-willed son to desert
Eva and return home. Eva heartbroken commits suicide by jumping into the Danube.
It was to be Foerster's only success in the theatre, though today it has fallen
into oblivion. As a composer he had all of the credentials required, having
come from a musical family (his father a teacher at the Prague Conservatoire),
his immense talents shared between the possibility of becoming a writer, actor
or composer. He was to marry one of the leading opera singers of the day, and
became a major critic in Prague, Hamburg and Vienna. Yet fame in the theatre
he sought eluded him. In Eva, dating from 1897, we probably have the reason,
the score beautifully constructed with attractive lyric melodies, the mix of
arias and duets arranged to give a well-balanced piece. It is in those moments
when Janacek would have screwed up the tension to play on our emotions that
Foerster just pulls back, though we must remember that Janacek came later and
could well have learned much from Eva. In this well sung performance
there is much to enjoy with Iveta Jirikova 's a fulsome voice for Eva that proves
deeply moving in the hopelessness of the third and final act. If Kostyantyn
Andreyev's lyric tenor as Manek becomes rather pinched at the top, it is a good
portrayal of the weak person. The other two major roles, the mother, Mesjanovka,
and husband, Samko, are well taken, though it is the orchestra that is the undoubted
joy of the release, the chorus joining in with gusto. The sound is the best
I have heard from Wexford, stage noises kept to a minimum, the audience remaining
quiet - a rare event in this theatre.
MERCADANTE: La Vestale.
Doriana Milazzo (Emilia), Dante Alcala (Decio), Agata Bienkowska (Giunia), Davide
Damiani (Publio), Danna Glaser (Le Gran Vestale), Andrea Patucelli (High Priest),
Ladislav Elgr (Licinio Murena), Mattia Denti (Lucio Silano), Wexford Festival
Opera Chorus, Cracow Philharmonic Orchestra, Paolo Arrivabeni (conductor). Marco
Polo 8.225310-11 (2CDs). (97' 05").
With Rossini and Donizetti
enjoying success touring around Europe, Saverio Mercadante was left to enjoy
the opportunities that existed in Italy following the death of Bellini and before
the arrival of Verdi on the scene. He composed over 30 operas that enjoyed varying
levels of attainment, La Vestale considered by many to be his outstanding
work. Certainly it was not short of performances after its Genoa premiere in
1841, in the same year enjoying a long run at Milan's La Scala. The story surrounds
the Roman general who is in love with Emilia, forced by her father to become
a priestess. The two illicitly meet but are discovered and Emilia is sentenced
to death. She is entombed alive, with her lover committing suicide on her tomb.
The young Verdi was in the opening night audience, and to be generous the similarity
with Aida is probably coincidence, though it cannot be coincidence that Mercadante's
first act also has a victory parade complete with fanfare trumpets. Given a
good performance - and this one is very good - it has many attractions, the
present performance to a new score edited by Marco Galarini from the original
manuscript. The long opening act duet between Emilia and Giunia being a particularly
wonderful moment, the following march nicely handled, and with the arrival of
the virile voiced Dante Alcala, a tenor with an heroic timbre and a real find,
the duet ends the first act in highly charged mood. The female singers have
the heavy East European vibrato that is an acquired taste, but certainly characterise
their roles with conviction. The orchestral playing under Paolo Arrivabeni is
quite good, and the sound from this 'live' performance at the Wexford Festival
in 2004 is most acceptable (try track 6 on the second disc to sample the performance
in general). Stage noises are minimal, but the audience does want to show their
pleasure at the end of the big duets.
BRAUNFELS: Prinzessin
Brambilla. Enrico Marabelli (Pantalone), Peter Paul (Prince Bastianello), Eric
Shaw (Claudio), Elena Lo Forte (Giazinta), Ekaterina Gubanova (Barbara), Vincenc
Esteve (Gascon), Alessandro Svab (Brutz), Riccardo Massi (Buffel), Stewart Kempster
(Cuniberto), Kim Sheehan (Young Girl), Wexford Festival Opera Chorus, Wexford
Festival Children¹s Chorus, Cracow Philharmonic Orchestra, Daniele Belardinelli
(conductor). Marco Polo 8.225312-13 (2CDs). (95' 12").
Though now almost totally
forgotten Walter Braunfels composed quite a large catalogue of music, despite
twice withdrawing from public life when blacklisted by the Nazi party. As an
educationalist, he was largely responsible for the creation of the modern Cologne
Hochschule fur Musik. He was a traditionalist, his operas mainly in the style
of Wagner with Humperdinck as a further influence. He was to write opera through
his whole creative career, Prinzessin Brambilla being his earliest score,
and it was preparation for a revival in Cologne in 1954 that Braunfels suddenly
died. He had completed the score in 1908 to his own libretto based on the story
by Hoffmann. Set in 18th century Rome at Carnival time with everybody either
in fancy dress or disguise, the plot is - to say the least - complex. But basically
it is a love story between an ambitious actor, Claudio, who falls in love with
a 'Princess' in disguise, her real identity being the girlfriend he has deserted.
Finally she is revealed to be Giazinta, and he comes to his senses and the two
are united. For a sample of the opera turn to track 6 on the second disc - the
opening of the Carnival scene. It is a work of immense charm and vivacity, and
as this is our first experience of the work on disc, we have to take the performance
on trust. The singing is of good quality, though I could imagine a more seductive
'Princess'. After some diffidence in the overture the orchestra settles into
a most enjoyable accompaniment. There are plenty of stage noise early in the
work, but they are generally less evident as the piece progresses. Sound quality
is well detailed and has plenty of impact.
LUMBYE: Napoli -
Final Galop. Eugenie Waltz. Polka militaire. Mjoiner Galop. Greeting from Stockholm.
Holger Danske. Spanish Gypsy Dance. The Alleenberg Steam Carousel Galop. The
Paris Student. The Dream of the Young Mother - Dream Pictures, Fantasia. Echo
from Denmark. Il Trovatore - Final Galop. Julefestgave - Anna Waltz. Borneballet
- Hopsa Galop. Tivoli Symphony Orchestra, David Riddell (conductor). Marco
Polo 8.225266. (60' 30").
All too often such extended
series run out of steam, but this one devoted to Lumbye bucks the trend, with
the attractions of each new album growing in interest. Volume 11 opens with
an invigorating galop from the ballet, Napoli, my interest grabbed by
the Eugenie Waltz, a piece that could have done service as an Offenbach
operetta overture. Riddell's tempos seem just right, the waltzes never rushed,
polkas bouncing rather than pushed along. Fortunately the orchestra play considerably
better than their vocal contribution to The Paris Student, one of the
most extensive and skilfully worked pieces on the disc. That he was influenced
by the music of the Strauss family is part of the Lumbye story, and we do have
many of the effects that Johann embroidered onto his scores. Yet as we hear
in The Dream of the Young Mother, Lumbye can be far more inventive
than any of the Strauss dinesty. Maybe in the final analysis he did not have
the ability to compose immediately memorable melodies, but give him a chance
with a few hearings and the melodies have more inherent grace. The Tivoli orchestra,
which Lumbye founded, possesses the lilt and bounce the music requires, with
the technical side of the orchestra always impeccably presented under the watchful
eye of their conductor. The engineers have gone in close to the orchestra to
obtain a nice punchy sound, and if you haven't started collecting the series
yet, start here.
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