Also, Lachian Dances; Moravian Dances. Antoni Wit, Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. Naxos 8.572695.
Czech composer Leos Janacek (1854-1928) has never been the most-popular writer on the musical stage, but there are several of his works firmly established in the basic repertoire. Among these are his Sinfonietta as well as the subject of this disc, his "rhapsody for orchestra" as he called it, Taras Bulba, a piece in three movements he premiered in 1918 and which he based on sections of a novel by the Russian writer Nikolai Gogol. The three movements are small tone poems describing various episodes in the life of the seventeenth-century Cossack leader and warrior Taras Bulba and his vision of liberation for his people.
While one can find any number of fine recordings of the work on CD, for example those by Charles Mackerras and the Vienna Philharmonic (Decca) and Vaclav Neumann and the Czech Philharmonic (Supraphon), this new release from Maestro Antoni Wit and the Warsaw Philharmonic is almost as compelling, and one may safely mention it in the same breath.
The music opens with the "Death of Andrij," Taras Bulba's youngest son, who has fallen in love with the daughter of his enemy and fights against his father, only to have his father kill him. Wit takes the opening very gently, building the love theme carefully. As he does with the rest of the Rhapsody, Wit adopts a broadly lyrical approach, letting the musical pictures unfold gracefully and deliberately. Nevertheless, when the high drama arrives, Wit is ready for it and creates a heady forward momentum. In other words, you'll get both Romance and excitement from the conductor.
The central movement, "Death of Ostap," deals with the grief of Taras Bulba's eldest son, Ostap, for his brother, Ostap subsequently captured by the enemy Poles and taken to Warsaw for execution. Bulba the elder follows in disguise and calls out in anguish at his son's death. Wit recreates the pain of Bulba fairly effectively, the music gliding effortlessly along under his guidance. Mackerras probably adds a degree more passion to the atmosphere, but it's close.
The final movement, "Prophecy and Death of Taras Bulba," concerns the capture and death of Taras Bulba, and his final prophecy that "A Tsar shall arise from Russian soil, and there shall not be a power in the world which shall not submit to him!" Here, Wit clearly expounds upon the importance of Bulba's final exclamation and ends the work on a tragically melancholy yet triumphant note.
Coupled with the rhapsody we find two dance suites by Janacek, the Lachian Dances (1889-90) and the Moravian Dances (1891). Janacek based the suites largely on Czech folk music of his day and well before, the songs describing a countryside and traditions quickly fading. They exhibit a much lighter, more joyous tone than the Taras Bulba music, as we might expect, and hint of Dvorak. Wit appears to be enjoying himself, and so do we.
Naxos recorded the music at Warsaw Philharmonic Hall, Poland, in 2010-2011, obtaining generally good results. The sound is very smooth and natural, with a wider dynamic range and transient impact than we usually find on a Naxos release. Although the sonic picture is a tad lacking in overall transparency, bit heavy, and a slightly close-up, there is a decent sense of depth and space to the acoustic. Along with a strong bass accompaniment, the organ pedals sounding quite deep and authoritative, the result is pleasing, if not entirely "audiophile."
JJP
Jun 29, 2012
Jun 28, 2012
Offenbach: Gaite Parisienne (CD review)
Also, Waldteufel: Waltzes. Manuel Rosenthal; Willi Boskovsky; Monte Carlo Philharmonic Orchestra. EMI 7243 5 85066 2.
It might be the best
seven or eight bucks you spent in a long time. This budget issue from EMI has
the distinction of being not only authoritative but spectacularly well
recorded. What more could you want for your hard-earned dollar?
In 1938 Manuel
Rosenthal pieced together a little ballet from some of the most familiar bits
of Jacques Offenbach’s operas La Vie pariesienne,
La belle Helene, Orpheus in the Underworld, The
Tales of Hoffmann, and others. Rosenthal died in 2003, just short of his
100th birthday, but in his lifetime he managed to record his Gaite Parisienne at least three times,
the last one for Naxos when he was in his nineties. Anyway, the recording we
have here was one the conductor/arranger made with the Monte Carlo Philharmonic
in 1976 when he was a mere stripling in his seventies.
When I first came to
the recording on vinyl, I was happily living with my old Fiedler RCA Living
Stereo LP from the mid Fifties (now remastered by both RCA and JVC). Frankly,
it took me a while to warm up to Rosenthal’s version, but because it sounded so
good I gave it repeated listens and it grew on me. Unlike Fiedler, who takes
the piece very briskly as a concert work and turns it into a joyously
infectious occasion, Rosenthal plays his ballet as a ballet, as a work for
dancers actually to negotiate. As such, it does not have the characteristic
bounce and sheer adrenaline rush of Fiedler’s more lively account. But
Rosenthal’s taking his time does produce some beautiful detail and refinement
that is hard to resist, and by the time he comes to the climactic “Can-Cans,”
he’s moving along at a pretty good clip. What’s more, his recording is still
demonstration worthy, with an amazing bass drum and some incredibly quick
transients.
Equally as pleasant,
the disc includes four of Emile Waldteufel’s most popular waltzes--Espana, Les Patineurs, Estudiantina,
and Acclamations--with Willi
Boskovsky conducting the same Monte Carlo Orchestra and also recorded in 1976.
If there is any small hesitation about the absolute quality of the Offenbach,
there is none whatsoever about the Waldteufel. These are some of the best
recordings of the four waltzes ever committed to disc, and the sound appears
even better spread out (for reasons unknown) than the Offenbach. If you already
have a Gaite Parisienne, that’s OK.
This one will make a nice complement to it; and what do you have to lose for
the paltry price of experimenting?
JJP
Jun 26, 2012
Moussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition (UltraHD CD)
Also, Night on Bald Mountain. Lorin Maazel, The Cleveland Orchestra. LIM UHD 056.
Since 1957, all recordings of Pictures at an Exhibition by Modest Mussorgsky (or "Moussorgsky" as it's spelled here) have pretty much fallen under the shadow of Fritz Reiner's famous RCA performance, which today continues to stand up as the most colorful, most descriptive, most exciting realization of the work available. However, in 1979 Lorin Maazel and Telarc Records were the first people to release a digital version of the music, remastered here by LIM (Lasting Impression Music), an affiliate label of FIM (First Impression Music). Because Maazel did such a credible job with the musical interpretation and Telarc did such a good job with the sonics, we must consider their collaboration though not superior to Reiner's at least in the same breath as the older man's. This LIM remastering simply makes a good thing better.
The Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881) wrote his vivid collection of tone poems (or "sound pictures," as he called them), Pictures at an Exhibition, as a piano suite in 1874. Afterwards, several people orchestrated it, the most famous and most often recorded version being the one we have here, arranged by French composer Maurice Ravel in 1922. Indeed, it really wasn't until Ravel orchestrated it that it became the basic-repertoire piece we know today. Anyway, because the Mussorgsky/Ravel work became so popular, almost every conductor and orchestra in the world have now performed it, most of them recording it, too. So competition is understandably fierce, with Reiner (RCA), Muti (EMI), and Maazel among the standout contenders.
The album starts out, though, with Mussorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain (1867), perhaps as famous as Pictures or more so thanks to Disney's Fantasia and Leopold Stokowski. Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov orchestrated the one that Maazel plays. Maazel's realization is not as thrilling as Georg Solti's rendering (on Decca, and, coincidentally, also remastered by LIM as a part of the album Romantic Russia), which still sets the bar higher than anyone for ultimate exhilaration. And the old Stokowski arrangement (remarkably, also available on a Telarc from Erich Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra) will hold an affectionately nostalgic place in the hearts of many fans. Still, Maazel offers up a good, sturdy performance, and one cannot fault the Telarc/LIM sound.
It is in the Pictures at an Exhibition, though, where Maazel shines. Mussorgsky based the various sections of the suite on his musical impressions of paintings by his friend, the artist and architect Viktor Hartmann. The idea of the work is that the listener is wandering through a picture gallery viewing the paintings, which the composer recreates in music, going so far as to give us a musical number, the Promenade, to accompany our stroll from time to time.
The Cleveland horns shine forth brilliantly from the very beginning, and command much weight. The Gnome and the Old Castle that follow carry solid characterizations, if not quite as vivid as Reiner or Muti brought to them, nor with quite the sheer orchestral virtuosity of the Chicago Symphony for Reiner.
It's really in the second half of the suite, however, that Maazel comes into his own. The Catacombs, the Hut of Baba Yaga the witch, and the gloriously expansive finale at the Great Gate of Kiev show Maazel at his best. Of course, a part of this impression derives from the excellent Telarc/LIM sonics, which really knock you out at the end.
Telarc recorded the two works at the Masonic Auditorium in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1978, and while it's one of Telarc's earliest digital releases, it remains one of their best. Although there was always a good sense of orchestral depth in the Telarc recording, the LIM remastering refines the smoothness of the sound, its warmth, and its naturalness. Dynamics are splendid, with taut, solid impact, and bass and treble show up well extended. The ultraquiet backgrounds ensure a lifelike response, and a light hall resonance adds to the realism.
Given its attractive, high-gloss, hardcover packaging, its twenty-page bound booklet, and its static-proof inner sleeve, the LIM product is a class product all the way. Just don't expect it to come cheap. For a complete listing of FIM/LIM products, you can visit their Web site at http://www.firstimpressionmusic.com/.
JJP
Since 1957, all recordings of Pictures at an Exhibition by Modest Mussorgsky (or "Moussorgsky" as it's spelled here) have pretty much fallen under the shadow of Fritz Reiner's famous RCA performance, which today continues to stand up as the most colorful, most descriptive, most exciting realization of the work available. However, in 1979 Lorin Maazel and Telarc Records were the first people to release a digital version of the music, remastered here by LIM (Lasting Impression Music), an affiliate label of FIM (First Impression Music). Because Maazel did such a credible job with the musical interpretation and Telarc did such a good job with the sonics, we must consider their collaboration though not superior to Reiner's at least in the same breath as the older man's. This LIM remastering simply makes a good thing better.
The Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881) wrote his vivid collection of tone poems (or "sound pictures," as he called them), Pictures at an Exhibition, as a piano suite in 1874. Afterwards, several people orchestrated it, the most famous and most often recorded version being the one we have here, arranged by French composer Maurice Ravel in 1922. Indeed, it really wasn't until Ravel orchestrated it that it became the basic-repertoire piece we know today. Anyway, because the Mussorgsky/Ravel work became so popular, almost every conductor and orchestra in the world have now performed it, most of them recording it, too. So competition is understandably fierce, with Reiner (RCA), Muti (EMI), and Maazel among the standout contenders.
The album starts out, though, with Mussorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain (1867), perhaps as famous as Pictures or more so thanks to Disney's Fantasia and Leopold Stokowski. Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov orchestrated the one that Maazel plays. Maazel's realization is not as thrilling as Georg Solti's rendering (on Decca, and, coincidentally, also remastered by LIM as a part of the album Romantic Russia), which still sets the bar higher than anyone for ultimate exhilaration. And the old Stokowski arrangement (remarkably, also available on a Telarc from Erich Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra) will hold an affectionately nostalgic place in the hearts of many fans. Still, Maazel offers up a good, sturdy performance, and one cannot fault the Telarc/LIM sound.
It is in the Pictures at an Exhibition, though, where Maazel shines. Mussorgsky based the various sections of the suite on his musical impressions of paintings by his friend, the artist and architect Viktor Hartmann. The idea of the work is that the listener is wandering through a picture gallery viewing the paintings, which the composer recreates in music, going so far as to give us a musical number, the Promenade, to accompany our stroll from time to time.
The Cleveland horns shine forth brilliantly from the very beginning, and command much weight. The Gnome and the Old Castle that follow carry solid characterizations, if not quite as vivid as Reiner or Muti brought to them, nor with quite the sheer orchestral virtuosity of the Chicago Symphony for Reiner.
It's really in the second half of the suite, however, that Maazel comes into his own. The Catacombs, the Hut of Baba Yaga the witch, and the gloriously expansive finale at the Great Gate of Kiev show Maazel at his best. Of course, a part of this impression derives from the excellent Telarc/LIM sonics, which really knock you out at the end.
Telarc recorded the two works at the Masonic Auditorium in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1978, and while it's one of Telarc's earliest digital releases, it remains one of their best. Although there was always a good sense of orchestral depth in the Telarc recording, the LIM remastering refines the smoothness of the sound, its warmth, and its naturalness. Dynamics are splendid, with taut, solid impact, and bass and treble show up well extended. The ultraquiet backgrounds ensure a lifelike response, and a light hall resonance adds to the realism.
Given its attractive, high-gloss, hardcover packaging, its twenty-page bound booklet, and its static-proof inner sleeve, the LIM product is a class product all the way. Just don't expect it to come cheap. For a complete listing of FIM/LIM products, you can visit their Web site at http://www.firstimpressionmusic.com/.
JJP
Jun 25, 2012
Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of Illumination (CD review)
Harry Christophers, The Sixteen; The Hilliard Ensemble. CORO COR16098.
The British Library’s press release for their exhibition
“Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of Illumination,” which ran from November 11,
2011 to March 13, 2012, tells us “it is the first to display richly illuminated
manuscripts from its Royal collection in such large numbers. Including 154
colourful and gilded handwritten books, dating between the 9th and 16th
centuries and previously belonging to the kings and queens of England, these
exquisite items are real treasures of the nation. The manuscripts, on display
in the PACCAR Gallery, offer unique insights into the lives and aspirations of
those for whom they were made, enriching our understanding of both the monarchy
and the Middle Ages.”
Fair enough. And what CORO (the record label of the
English choir The Sixteen) did to accompany the occasion was put together this
compilation album of medieval and Renaissance music inspired by the exhibition,
featuring previously recorded selections from The Sixteen and The Hilliard
Ensemble. CORO released the album in 2012, but they give no date or place
references about the recordings in the package. I suppose we should simply be
glad we have them because they provide a broad overview of choral music from
the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, a sort of “Greatest Hits of the
Renaissance.”
For those who don’t know the two singing groups involved,
The Sixteen are a United Kingdom-based choir and period instrument orchestra,
founded by Harry Christophers in 1979, that has been making records and winning
awards for over three decades. Since 2001 The Sixteen have been releasing their
material under their own record label, CORO. The Hilliard Ensemble is a British
male vocal quartet originally devoted to the performance of early music and
founded in 1974 by Paul Hilliard. They, too, have released numerous
best-selling albums.
For this Royal
Manuscripts compilation, the folks at CORO have provided eleven tracks,
with a running time of over seventy-four minutes. These include something of a
“who’s who” of Renaissance music: John Browne’s Salve Regina, Robert Wylkynson’s Jesus auem transiens, Richard Pygott’s Quid petis, O fili?, William Cornysh’s Ave Maria, Mater Dei,
Richard Davy’s Stabat Mater,
Guillaume Dufay’s Agnus Dei, Thomas
Tallis’s Spem in Alium, and several
anonymously written pieces: Hail Mary,
full of grace, Lauda: Regina sovrana, This day day dawes, and Christus surrexit.
As we would expect from two such celebrated singing groups
as we have here, they execute each of the tunes superbly, the singing clearly
articulated, the phrasing precise, and the musical expression uniquely strong.
Among the tracks I liked best was the first one, the program opener, John
Browne’s Salve Regina, taken from the
Eton Choirbook along with three
others. The Sixteen sing in heavenly voice, and the acoustic, a little bright,
otherwise affords them a sympathetic resonance.
The choir also beautifully sing Wylkynson’s Jesus antem transiens. Here’s the thing
with this one, though: The recording favors the left side of the stage for the
first half of the music and then slowly, gradually, moves to the middle and
finally the right side. It’s a unique experience, the singing moving across the
field of sound, I assume intentionally although the accompanying booklet makes
no mention of the effect.
Certainly, one of the loveliest of all the songs is the
anonymous Medieval carol Hail, Mary, full
of grace, again with The Sixteen. It’s a combination of sacred and common
verses, the kind of thing finding favor at the time.
The first time we hear the Hilliard Ensemble is in the
anonymous Lauda: Regina sovrana, and
it presents us with a change sonically from the previous tracks. There are only
the four men involved, who sing unaccompanied, the recording sounds more
neutral, the venue is more reverberant, and the monophonic Lauda (a song of praise containing a single melodic line) appears
more chant-like.
And so it goes, the music sometimes highly religious in
tone and content, sometimes symbolic, and always treated in the highest regard
by both groups of singers. The album ends with probably the most-famous piece
in the set, Tallis’s Spem in alium
(“Hope in any other”), a forty-voice motet that The Sixteen handle a little
quickly but with great flourish, closing the show in style.
JJP
Jun 22, 2012
Vespers 1612 (CD review)
Music of Viadana, Gabrieli, Barbarino, Palestrina, Monteverdi, and Soriano. Robert Hollingworth, I Fagiolini. Decca B0016794-02.
Titles are everything, and I suppose this one, Vespers 1612 (or 1612 Vespers if we read it literally), needs a little explaining.
The Vespers part is fairly
self-explanatory; at least, for those folks who know what Vespers are in terms of music. Just as a reminder, Vespers refer to a late-afternoon or
evening religious service. In the Roman Catholic Church, they form a part of the service evenings and
often held as a public ceremony on Sundays and holy days, most often containing
evensong, a form of worship that’s sung.
OK, the album contains vesper evensong. But what’s the 1612 all about? For one thing, the year
1612 marked the death of the great Italian composer of vocal and instrumental
music Giovanni Gabrieli, very influential early on in the musical development
of the Baroque age. In addition, it marked the first public celebration of the
Venetian naval victory at Lepanto in 1571, a celebration that went on for over
200 years after the incident as the festival called The Feast of Our Lady of
the Most Holy Rosary. (The Venetians figured Mary had a significant influence
on the outcome of the battle and, thus, dedicated the festivities and devotions
to her.)
Maestro Robert Hollingworth and his award-winning vocal
ensemble I Fagiolini have attempted in this album to reconstruct what at least
some of the program for that initial celebration might have been like. What we
get in the reconstruction are world-premiere recordings of Vesper Psalms by Lodovico Viadana, a composer who helped usher in
changes from the Renaissance to the Baroque period; the 28-voice Magnificat by Gabrieli; and a seeming
host of other pieces from the era of multi-choir music.
I mean, if you called the album Baroque Vespers, Vol. IV,
or, heaven forbid, just Baroque Vocal
Music, Vol. CCCXVII, it wouldn’t have quite the same ring, would it?
Anyway, the program begins with several short pieces by Viadana (c. 1560-1627),
including his setting for Psalm 109
and four others. We notice quickly that Hollingworth and his team have varied
the selections considerably, so that we get large groups of singers followed by
more-intimate arrangements for smaller groups, even individual voices. They are
all lovely and display a wide range of styles.
Bartolomo Barbarino (1568-c. 1617) next contributes Exaudi, Deus, with its stirring cornett
solo. There follow more psalms and multi-choir pieces by Viadana, Palestrina,
Monteverdi, and Gabrieli, some accompanied, some not, some with soloists, some
not.
These all lead up to the centerpiece of the program,
Gabrieli’s Magnificat a20, a28. Con il sicut locutus. In ecco, one of a
pair of seven-choir arrangements that survive incomplete. Hugh Keyte supplied
the reconstruction in this first-time recording. The battle music that
constitutes the middle portion comes as a welcome surprise.
The singing itself sounds precisely articulated, yet not
without adequate expression. The instrumental and vocal accompaniment,
augmented by the English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble and De Profundis
(Cambridge), is light enough never to intrude upon the primary voices, and that
includes the unobtrusive and almost ever-present organ. For anyone interested
in the early Baroque period (or for those who are not, who knows), these
multifaceted works with their breadth of expression provide a uniquely moving,
rewarding, and often spectacular listening experience. More of an event,
actually.
The sound is quite agreeable, recorded for Decca at St.
John’s, Upper Norwood, London, in 2012. The engineers capture a fine sense of
occasion, with a wide stage, and especially good depth and hall resonance.
Occasionally, one notices a very slightly hard, bright, glassy response from
closer sounds, but it is not enough to be a problem. In fact, these qualities
often provide a more sharply etched definition for the sonics. As it is, we get
rich, resplendent voices set in an environment with just the right amount of
reverberation to simulate the live space of St. John’s in one’s living room. In
short, it makes pleasant listening.
JJP
Jun 21, 2012
Falla: El Sombrero de Tres Picos (SACD review)
Also, El Amor Brujo; Danza from La Vida Breve. Alicia Nafe and Maria Jose Martos, mezzo-sopranos; Maximiano Valdes, Asturias Symphony Orchestra. Naxos SACD 6.110018.
Manuel de Falla (1876-1946) was one of Spain's most important composers of the twentieth century, and this disc brings together two of his most popular pieces of music, the ballets El Amor Brujo (Love, the Magician) and El Sombrero de Tres Picos (The Three-Cornered Hat); plus "Danza" from La Vida Breve.
Maestro Maximiano Valdes and his Spanish orchestra, the Asturias Symphony, present the music well enough, and the Naxos engineers do a reasonably good job capturing most of it realistically. The first piece on the disc, El Amor Brujo, is a rather grim work, about twenty-four minutes long depicting a jealous dead lover haunting his former girlfriend. Valdes performs it in an appropriately dark and foreboding manner. Conversely, El Sombrero de Tres Pico is a lighthearted tale of attempted seduction, the music lasting almost forty minutes. Together, we get quite an ample amount of music, when for a fill-up we have the "Danza."
I would not say, however, that Valdes is more colorful in his music making than Charles Dutoit or Ernest Ansermet were in this repertoire (both on Decca). Indeed, by comparison it is still Dutoit and Ansermet who offer up more vitality, especially evident in The Three-Cornered Hat. Yet listeners may find themselves divided on the merits of the sound of the discs, the newer Naxos issue being a bit more subdued, the Deccas brighter or more natural, depending, and definitely more sparkling. It's hardly a moot point, either, as one can find the original Deccas in various configurations on regular CD's and even remastered on audiophile (albeit costly) discs from LIM.
Anyway, the folks at Naxos offer the recordings on both a regular compact disc at mid price and a Super Audio Compact Disc at regular, full price. The SACD offers not only the standard stereo layer but a two-channel DSD layer and a 5.1 surround layer. The Naxos sound, particularly in SACD, is wide, deep, and extended, a tad fat in the upper bass, but fairly lifelike. While this may not be absolute audiophile sound even in its SACD format, it is more than adequate for the occasion.
JJP
Manuel de Falla (1876-1946) was one of Spain's most important composers of the twentieth century, and this disc brings together two of his most popular pieces of music, the ballets El Amor Brujo (Love, the Magician) and El Sombrero de Tres Picos (The Three-Cornered Hat); plus "Danza" from La Vida Breve.
Maestro Maximiano Valdes and his Spanish orchestra, the Asturias Symphony, present the music well enough, and the Naxos engineers do a reasonably good job capturing most of it realistically. The first piece on the disc, El Amor Brujo, is a rather grim work, about twenty-four minutes long depicting a jealous dead lover haunting his former girlfriend. Valdes performs it in an appropriately dark and foreboding manner. Conversely, El Sombrero de Tres Pico is a lighthearted tale of attempted seduction, the music lasting almost forty minutes. Together, we get quite an ample amount of music, when for a fill-up we have the "Danza."
I would not say, however, that Valdes is more colorful in his music making than Charles Dutoit or Ernest Ansermet were in this repertoire (both on Decca). Indeed, by comparison it is still Dutoit and Ansermet who offer up more vitality, especially evident in The Three-Cornered Hat. Yet listeners may find themselves divided on the merits of the sound of the discs, the newer Naxos issue being a bit more subdued, the Deccas brighter or more natural, depending, and definitely more sparkling. It's hardly a moot point, either, as one can find the original Deccas in various configurations on regular CD's and even remastered on audiophile (albeit costly) discs from LIM.
Anyway, the folks at Naxos offer the recordings on both a regular compact disc at mid price and a Super Audio Compact Disc at regular, full price. The SACD offers not only the standard stereo layer but a two-channel DSD layer and a 5.1 surround layer. The Naxos sound, particularly in SACD, is wide, deep, and extended, a tad fat in the upper bass, but fairly lifelike. While this may not be absolute audiophile sound even in its SACD format, it is more than adequate for the occasion.
JJP
Jun 19, 2012
Bizet: Carmen Suites (UltraHD CD)
Also, Grieg: Suite from Peer Gynt. Leonard Slatkin, St. Louis Symphony Orchestra. LIM UHD 059.
There is little doubt that for the past hundred-odd years
people have found the opera Carmen
and the suites derived from it charming. Yet French composer Georges Bizet
(1838-1875) would never live to see exactly how popular his final completed
opera would become, the work seeing a poor reception in the year of the
composer’s early death. Sometimes, life is unfair.
Bizet set the opera in Seville, Spain, during the early
nineteenth century, the narrative involving a beautiful and tempestuous Gypsy
girl, Carmen, who lavishes her affections on a young but naive soldier, Don
Jose. He becomes so enamoured with Carmen, he spurns his former lover, deserts
his regiment, and joins Carmen and a crew of smugglers. When Carmen
subsequently rejects him and takes up with a bullfighter, Don Jose becomes so
enraged with jealousy that he murders her. How’s that for melodrama! Here, on
this 1979 Telarc release remastered by LIM, we get two orchestral suites from
the opera, containing most of the famous music.
LIM (Lasting Impression Music), if you remember, is an
affiliate label of FIM (First Impression Music), a company that for the better
part of a decade has been remastering classic older material, using the
original master tapes and state-of-the-art processing. These days, they are
using a new Ultra High Definition technology utilizing 32-bit mastering. They
are also working with a number of recordings from the Telarc catalogue, Telarc
being one of the companies that pioneered the digital revolution in recording.
Anyway, Telarc Records, conductor Leonard Slatkin, and the
St. Louis Symphony Orchestra chose to do two orchestral suites from Carmen, the first containing six items,
the second two. Suite No. 1 contains
the Prelude to Act I, Aragonaise (Prelude to Act II), Intermezzo
(Prelude to Act III), Seguidilla, Les Dragoons d’Alcala, and Les
Toreadors (Introduction to Act
I). Suite No. 2 contains only two
numbers, La Garde Montante and Danse Boheme, but they are individually
longer than those of the first suite.
In Slatkin’s readings we get sturdy, straightforward
interpretations of the score, without too much characterization from the
conductor. If you want more color in these suites, I would suggest you look to
Sir Thomas Beecham (EMI), Paul Paray (Mercury), Leopold Stokowski (Sony), or
Herbert von Karajan (DG). While these are much older recordings than the
Telarc, they still sound pretty good, and the realizations are more creative.
With these Slatkin renderings, it’s the sound that’s king.
Still, Slatkin’s version of the Intermezzo does come across beautifully, and Les Toreadors, which Slatkin takes at a rapid pace, is wonderfully
exciting, especially with Telarc’s big bass drum pounding away in the
background. Nevertheless, it hasn’t quite the swagger we hear from the
aforementioned conductors. The Suite No.
2 has fewer but longer entries, as I say, and Slatkin gives them a fair
amount of spontaneity, closing the show with a huge burst of energy.
Coupled with the Bizet sets is a six-movement suite from Peer Gynt by Edvard Grieg (1843-1907),
taken from the incidental music Grieg wrote in 1875 to accompany Henrik Ibsen’s
play of the same name. I liked these selections from Slatkin rather more than I
did the Bizet because there seems to be more life, more vitality, to them.
Here, I found a more convincing depiction of the events in the play. The “however”
is that recordings from Oivin Fjeldstad (Decca) and Raymond Leppard (Philips)
can be even more imaginative, and while they don’t sound as good as these from
Telarc/LIM, they are a lot cheaper.
Telarc’s producer, Robert Woods, and engineer Jack Renner
recorded the music at Powell Symphony Hall, St. Louis, in 1979, and LIM’s
Winston Ma and Robert Friedrich remastered it using their Ultra High Definition
32-bit processing in 2011, releasing the remaster in 2012. The sound they
obtain is better than anything else you’ll find in Bizet or Grieg. The
definition is rock steady, firmer on the LIM remaster than on the original
Telarc disc, and the bass and dynamic contrasts are slightly tauter. What’s
more, the LIM brings out the imaging and depth better, too. Now, we’re not
talking about night-and-day differences, you understand, but listening
carefully and comparing, you’ll hear the improvements. Whether the LIM
remastering is wroth the extra money, of course, is up to one’s ears and one’s
pocketbook.
As icing on the cake (or to seal the deal, so to speak),
the folks at LIM also provide an attractive, high-gloss, hardcover package, a
twenty-page bound booklet, and a static-proof inner sleeve. For a complete
listing of FIM/LIM products, you can visit their Web site at
http://www.firstimpressionmusic.com/.
JJP
Jun 18, 2012
Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra (CD review)
Also, Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta. Marin Alsop, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. Naxos 8.572486.
As so often happens in the world of classical recording, it's damned if you do and damned if you don't. I mean, when a conductor and orchestra have to decide on what piece to record, should they go with a relatively unknown commodity and lose potential buyers who have never heard of the work, or should they go with a popular piece and risk losing potential buyers who already have multiple favorite recordings of it? In the case of Marin Alsop and her Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, they have chosen in Bartok to go head-to-head with Fritz Reiner's celebrated RCA recording and both of Georg Solti's high-powered Decca performances. That Ms. Alsop and her team acquit themselves reasonably well on this low-priced Naxos disc is a testament to their talents, which do justice to the composer.
The disc begins with probably the most celebrated music of Hungarian Bela Bartok (1881-1945), the Concerto for Orchestra, the composer's last completed orchestral work, premiered just a year before his death. It's somewhat ironic that after a lifetime of writing music, his final composition would be his most-lasting contribution to the classical library. Bartok said that he titled the piece a "concerto" because of its "tendency to treat the single orchestral instruments in a concertante or soloistic manner." He also noted that the work transitions from the stark grimness of the opening movements, to a "death song" in the third movement, and to a "life-assertion" theme in the last.
Anyway, Ms. Alsop treats this death-to-life progression as well as almost anyone, although there are times when one wishes she had made the contrasts even more pointed. Best of all, she never sentimentalizes or glamorizes the music in the style of, say, a Karajan. She keeps it spare.
The second-movement Allegretto moves along at a graceful, if fairly leisurely, pace. It lightens the mood considerably. In the third-movement Bartok turns to dark yet lyrical material, which the composer described as a "misty texture of rudimentary motifs." Like the description, the music seems rather generalized, and Alsop handles it in a kind of wispy, dreamlike way, building in mysterious, almost spooky intensity as it goes along, a "lugubrious deathsong," as Bartok called it.
Next, we find a brief Intermezzo borrowing (or parodying) Shostakovich that sets up the dance rhythms of the Finale: Presto, where Bartok went all out to show the vibrancy of life. Alsop treats it gently, yet with much joy. It's a worthy realization of the score.
I wasn't quite as taken by Ms. Alsop's interpretation of the coupling, though, Bartok's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta, written in 1936. The composer had by that time been experimenting with "arch" forms, mirrorlike sequences of ideas building in one direction to an arch and then reversing in the second half. While she keeps the shape intact, Ms. Alsop's actual rendition of the piece seems just a tad wanting in atmosphere, impetus, and drive. Incidentally, if you don't actually know the music yet it sounds vaguely familiar to you, it may be because Stanley Kubrick used it in The Shining, sort of eerie music for an eerie film.
Naxos recorded the performances at Meyerhoff Hall, Baltimore, in 2009-2010. In the tradition of so many Naxos recordings, the sound is slightly warm and soft. There is a nice room resonance that lends verisimilitude to the listening experience, so one does feel involved with the actual event. Reasonably good dynamics and frequency range help, too. Midrange clarity is adequate for the occasion, as is a strong mid bass and a moderately good sense of orchestral depth.
JJP
As so often happens in the world of classical recording, it's damned if you do and damned if you don't. I mean, when a conductor and orchestra have to decide on what piece to record, should they go with a relatively unknown commodity and lose potential buyers who have never heard of the work, or should they go with a popular piece and risk losing potential buyers who already have multiple favorite recordings of it? In the case of Marin Alsop and her Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, they have chosen in Bartok to go head-to-head with Fritz Reiner's celebrated RCA recording and both of Georg Solti's high-powered Decca performances. That Ms. Alsop and her team acquit themselves reasonably well on this low-priced Naxos disc is a testament to their talents, which do justice to the composer.
The disc begins with probably the most celebrated music of Hungarian Bela Bartok (1881-1945), the Concerto for Orchestra, the composer's last completed orchestral work, premiered just a year before his death. It's somewhat ironic that after a lifetime of writing music, his final composition would be his most-lasting contribution to the classical library. Bartok said that he titled the piece a "concerto" because of its "tendency to treat the single orchestral instruments in a concertante or soloistic manner." He also noted that the work transitions from the stark grimness of the opening movements, to a "death song" in the third movement, and to a "life-assertion" theme in the last.
Anyway, Ms. Alsop treats this death-to-life progression as well as almost anyone, although there are times when one wishes she had made the contrasts even more pointed. Best of all, she never sentimentalizes or glamorizes the music in the style of, say, a Karajan. She keeps it spare.
The second-movement Allegretto moves along at a graceful, if fairly leisurely, pace. It lightens the mood considerably. In the third-movement Bartok turns to dark yet lyrical material, which the composer described as a "misty texture of rudimentary motifs." Like the description, the music seems rather generalized, and Alsop handles it in a kind of wispy, dreamlike way, building in mysterious, almost spooky intensity as it goes along, a "lugubrious deathsong," as Bartok called it.
Next, we find a brief Intermezzo borrowing (or parodying) Shostakovich that sets up the dance rhythms of the Finale: Presto, where Bartok went all out to show the vibrancy of life. Alsop treats it gently, yet with much joy. It's a worthy realization of the score.
I wasn't quite as taken by Ms. Alsop's interpretation of the coupling, though, Bartok's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta, written in 1936. The composer had by that time been experimenting with "arch" forms, mirrorlike sequences of ideas building in one direction to an arch and then reversing in the second half. While she keeps the shape intact, Ms. Alsop's actual rendition of the piece seems just a tad wanting in atmosphere, impetus, and drive. Incidentally, if you don't actually know the music yet it sounds vaguely familiar to you, it may be because Stanley Kubrick used it in The Shining, sort of eerie music for an eerie film.
Naxos recorded the performances at Meyerhoff Hall, Baltimore, in 2009-2010. In the tradition of so many Naxos recordings, the sound is slightly warm and soft. There is a nice room resonance that lends verisimilitude to the listening experience, so one does feel involved with the actual event. Reasonably good dynamics and frequency range help, too. Midrange clarity is adequate for the occasion, as is a strong mid bass and a moderately good sense of orchestral depth.
JJP
Jun 16, 2012
Chopin: Waltzes (CD review)
Also, Impromptus. Arthur Rubinstein. RCA 82876-59422-2.
When discussing the
great pianists of the twentieth century, no one could fail to mention the name
of Arthur Rubinstein. Indeed, for many piano enthusiasts, Rubinstein might be
the only name cited. Born in 1887, the Polish-American virtuoso made his piano
debut at the age of seven, continuing to play and record almost continuously
through his eighties, dying in 1982 at the age of ninety-five. Of the man’s
many musical specialities in the course of this amazing career was Chopin, an
interpreter of whom there was none greater. He recorded the Chopin Waltzes several times, this one his
stereo collection from June, 1963.
Rubinstein recorded
the most common fourteen of Chopin’s Waltzes
because those were the ones directly attributable to the composer, as opposed
to the five or six more that scholars discovered after the composer’s death.
Rubinstein played them like few others: cleanly, with vigor but without fuss,
with energy but without eccentricity. Every note seems right, every passage a
work of considered excellence and maturity. Technically, one might hear the Waltzes played in a more letter-perfect
manner, but one cannot doubt the intent of the composer or the pianist in
Rubinstein’s performances.
So, why should one
buy this disc? First, obviously, because there are no better performances of
the Waltzes. Second, because the
album has been remastered and sounds better than ever, clearer and more precise
than in its first CD incarnation from 1984. Third, because the album now
includes as a bonus Chopin’s four Impromptus,
recorded by Rubinstein in 1964 and themselves as good as or better than any
other recording of the pieces on disc. The Opus 66, “Fantasie-Impromptu,” will
break your heart. And fourth, it is because the folks at RCA/Sony offer the
disc at mid price, which is a bargain no music lover should overlook.
It was good to see
RCA (now under the Sony umbrella) back in action a few years ago with a
reissued line of mid-priced Red Seal classics, each a bargain in itself. Of two
other discs I sampled at the time, the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 (82876-59411-2) with Horowitz and the Brahms Violin and Double Concertos with Heifetz and Piatigorsky (82876-59410), stood
out. Although both of the recordings had been available for a few years in
their present remasterings on CD, their availability at mid price is
commendable. Also of interest are the Mahler Fourth with Levine (82876-59413-2), Debussy’s La Mer with Munch (82876-59416-2), Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 1 with Richter (82876-59421-2), and Schubert’s Symphony 9 with Wand (82876-59425-2). In
all, there were twenty titles in RCA’s re-released Red Seal Classic Library,
each one as intriguing as the next.
JJP
Jun 14, 2012
Mayer: Violin Sonatas (CD review)
Aleksandra Maslovaric,
violin; Anne-Lise Longuemare, piano. Feminae Records.
JJP
Several points attracted me to this album. First, I was
unfamiliar with Serbian-born violinist Aleksandra Maslovaric
and wanted to know more about her work. Second, I was unfamiliar with the
nineteenth-century composer Emilie Mayer and wanted to know more her as well.
Third, the three Mayer violin sonatas presented on the disc were previously
unrecorded, and I wanted to hear what few listeners had ever heard before. So,
here was a perfect and ultimately rewarding opportunity to find out a few
things.
In a day and age when polite society expected women to be
at home tending to the family, German composer Emilie Mayer (1812-1883) was out
and about doing a man’s work, writing music. More important, she apparently
went at with a passion, producing eight symphonies, fifteen concert overtures,
and numerous chamber works and songs. Like her more-famous and influential
contemporary, Clara Schumann, Ms. Mayer traveled throughout Europe performing
and attending concerts of her music.
The Mayer sonatas presented on this disc are clearly in
the Romantic vein--beautiful, flowing, and melodic--and Ms. Maslovaric,
accompanied by Anne-Lise Longuemare on piano, perform them in an equally
beautiful, flowing, melodic manner. The material may not be important or
memorable enough to warrant more than an occasional listen, but those
occasional visits will assuredly be enjoyable.
The disc begins with the Sonata in E minor, Op. 19 (1867), the longest and most-mature work
on the program. Here, we get a lengthy and energetic opening Allegro agitato, certainly underlining
the agitation part. Yet with the movement we hear any number of tempo and mood
shifts as the various themes pour out of the violin. Moreover, Ms. Maslovaric
seems wholly dedicated to displaying the music in its best light, whether
dancing lightly through the notes or stressing their intensity. The ensuing Scherzo is a happy, bouncy affair, and
Ms. Maslovaric imbues it with a tender care that ensures we don’t see it as
lightweight or frivolous. The Adagio
has a faintly melancholy tone, and the final Allegro shows a brilliance that matches the opening section.
Next, we get the little Sonata in E flat major, which survives in manuscript form only. It
evidences a good deal of creativity, and one wonders why the composer chose
never to publish it. The final work in the album, the Sonata in A minor, Op. 18 (1864), is also a relatively short piece,
its four movements totaling around twenty-three minutes. It displays some of
the same qualities as the E minor Sonata,
although in more compressed form. There are strikingly lovely passages of high
Romanticism juxtaposed with vibrant moments of excitement.
For fans of chamber music looking for something a bit
different, Ms. Maslovaric’s decision to emphasize in her repertoire classical
works by female composers comes as a welcome change of pace for the record
industry, and her recordings make a welcome addition to the classical music
catalogue.
Ms. Maslovaric recorded the album at Skywalker Sound,
Marin County, CA, mastered it at Romanowski Mastering, San Francisco, CA, and
released it in 2012. Although the piano sounds slightly bigger and closer than
the violin, the piano is also somewhat softer and more resonant, the two
instruments both exhibiting a smooth, rich, natural response. Output seems a
little high, so you’ll need to adjust the gain when you start it up. The violin
is particularly lifelike, and the two players appear well imaged, with strong
dynamic contrasts to set them off.
Jun 12, 2012
Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 “Emperor” (UltraHD CD)
Rudolf Serkin,
piano; Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony Orchestra. LIM UHD 053.
JJP
Telarc originally released this album in 1981, and at the
time I remember their sending me an LP of it to review. I’m afraid that for one
reason or another, it initially didn’t impress me much. It seemed to me back
then that both the performance and the recording needed more weight. That
turned out to be an unfortunate judgment because I shortly came to like the LP
very much. That’s why I find this remastering by LIM (Lasting Impression
Music), an affiliate label of FIM (First Impression Music), so remarkable.
After all these years, it seems like an entirely new recording, both sonically
and interpretively. Part of my new appreciation stems from LIM’s extravagant
Ultra High Definition 32-bit processing, of course, and part of it is that I
probably never gave the recording its proper due in the first place. In any
event, listening again after all these years, I found it a complete delight.
German composer Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) wrote his
Piano Concerto No. 5 in E Flat, Op.
73, “Emperor,” in 1809, premiering it in 1811 and dedicating it to the Archduke
Rudolf, his patron and student at the time. It would be Beethoven’s final piano
concerto, and it would go on to become one of the man’s most-popular pieces of
music.
Any rendition must offer a big, bold, imposing opening Allegro, with its long, grand
introduction, which Serkin provides, the pianist adopting a moderate, never
breathless pace, and Ozawa giving him the chance to create a most-heroic solo
contribution. It’s a nuanced performance from Serkin, yet each facet of it
works, from the softest passages to the most ardent segments. Beethoven
intended the opening movement to be monumental, and Serkin and the orchestra
respond to it accordingly. The players perform their duties in exemplary
fashion, with no lack of power, passion, grandeur, or insight.
In the central Adagio,
we get one of the loveliest melodies Beethoven (or anyone else) ever wrote, a
brief duet between piano and orchestra, and Serkin handles it almost as
tenderly as anyone. True, Serkin hasn’t quite the poetic bent of Wilhelm
Kempff, with Serkin seeming a tad more mechanical and matter-of-fact by
comparison. Still, it’s so close, I wouldn’t quibble.
With Serkin, the hushed transition into the final Rondo: Allegro registers a distinctive
character and takes the concerto on to glowing heights, Serkin playing in fine,
melodic style driving toward a wonderfully refined yet exuberant conclusion.
Serkin may have been up in years when he made this Telarc recording (he was
close to eighty at the time), but he doesn’t show it. Of his several recordings
of the Fifth Concerto, this one from
Telarc is surely his finest, most glowing, most magisterial, most self assured,
most exultant rendering of them all.
In terms of ranking the great recordings of Beethoven’s Fifth Concerto, one must place Serkin
among the very best, alongside Kovacevich, Arrau, Ashkenazy, Kempff, Brendel,
Pollini, Fleisher, Gieseking, Horowitz, Curzon, Rubinstein, Gilels, Cliburn,
Perahia, and a very few select others. It’s that good.
The audio, which Telarc recorded digitally in 1981 at
Symphony Hall, Boston, and which LIM remastered in 2011 and released in 2012,
is big and bold to match the performance. LIM’s 32-bit Ultra High Definition
processing results in a beautifully natural piano sound and a dynamic
orchestral support, making an almost ideal combination of instrumental sonics.
We also hear a touch of ambient hall bloom, helping the piano appear rich and
resonant, and there’s good clarity throughout without being in any way bright,
hard, or edgy. In short, this LIM product is the best-sounding Beethoven Fifth Piano Concerto I have ever heard,
and a brief comparison to over half a dozen other recordings of the piece I had
on hand confirmed this impression.
Considering, too,
its attractive, high-gloss, hardcover packaging, its twenty-page bound booklet,
and its static-proof inner sleeve, the LIM product is something of an
audiophile’s dream. Just don’t expect it to come cheap. For a complete listing
of FIM/LIM products, you can visit their Web site at
http://www.firstimpressionmusic.com/.
Jun 11, 2012
Music for the Berlin Court of Friedrich the Great (CD review)
Music of Graun, Nichelmann,
Friedrich II, and Bach. Akademie fur Alte Musik Berlin. Harmonia Mundi HMC
902132.
According to the back cover of this Harmonia Mundi
release, “The year 2012 marks the tercentenary of the birth of Frederick the
Great, whose political and military glory has often relegated his musical
talent to the status of a mere hobby. But Frederick II was not only the key
personality of Berlin musical life for the whole 18th century--as is shown by
the work of the composers presented on this CD, all of whom worked at his court
at some point in their careers--but also an excellent flautist who left
posterity a number of fine flute sonatas from his own pen.”
The disc contains five works from four composers,
including Friedrich II, king of Prussia from 1740-1786. They amply display the
creative breadth of the court’s musicians.
Things begin with Johann Gottlieb Graun (1703-1771) and
his Overture und Allegro in D minor.
Like the other selections on the disc, the music is not particularly memorable,
but it is noteworthy for its lively style, and the Akademie fur Alte Musik
Berlin, the award-winning chamber orchestra that has devoted itself to the
study and performance of ancient music for the past thirty or more years, play
the music with an undisguised enthusiasm. These works from Graun provide an
exhilarating start to the program.
After that, we get the Concerto
per il Cembalo concertante in C minor by Christoph Nichelmann (1717-1762),
a typical three-movement work that features some invigorating harpsichord
playing in the opening Allegro. If
the ensemble tend to rush things a tad, I suppose it’s their prerogative; I’d
have liked them to slow it down a trifle. As Nichelmann also wrote songs, one
can understand why his central Adagio
sounds so rhapsodic; it seems like something from the Romantic period rather
than a century earlier. A quick little Presto
concludes the piece.
Then we come to one of the many works by Friedrich II
(1712-1786) himself, the Flute Sonata in
C minor, Nr.190. The king was an accomplished flutist and composed over a
hundred sonatas for the instrument. This sonata’s three movements follow the
outline slow, moderately fast, and faster. The music is sweet, the solo flute
and fortepiano gliding along effortlessly.
Next, we are back to Graun, this time with his Concerto per il Viola da Gamba concertata in
A minor. I enjoyed this piece more than Graun’s earlier one on the disc,
perhaps because of the lovely sonority of the instrument. The cello would later
supplant the viola da gamba in modern orchestras, but it certainly has a
plaintively distinctive sound. The work itself is one of the most pleasurable
on the program.
The album closes with a piece by the most-famous composer
on the disc, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788), his Sinfonie Nr. 1 in D major. This was an early example of the
then-developing symphony form, and as such it sounds more mature, better
elaborated, than the concertos that precede it. The ensemble is no longer
merely supporting a solo instrument but creating a variety of contrasting
sounds of its own. We can see where it’s going and how the symphony form would
come into its own with a few more decades. The Akademie play it with great
zest, and even though they again seem to take things at a rather heady pace for
my liking, they maintain a refined dignity in the process.
Recorded at Teldec Studios, Berlin, in 2011, the sound is
very slightly on the hard, bright, metallic side; yet it displays excellent
depth and clarity, too. The imaging is precise, dynamics are more than
adequate, and while the frequency range doesn’t appear too extended, it’s
sufficient for the music. There is also a good, rich tone from the harpsichord
that comes as a welcome addition.
JJP
Jun 8, 2012
Handel: Music for the Royal Fireworks (CD review)
Jeanne Lamon,
Tafelmusik. Tafelmusik Media TMK1011CD.
JJP
In 1749 the British Crown commissioned George Frideric
Handel (1685-1759), German born but by then long a naturalized British subject,
to provide music to accompany a huge fireworks display commemorating the Treaty
of Aix-la-Chapelle. The government held the celebration outdoors on the night
of April 21 in Green Park in an enormous wooden structure built especially for
the occasion. Apparently, the affair
was a huge success in spite of some disappointing fireworks and a part of the
building burning down. That much we know. What we don't know is exactly what
instruments the band employed for the première performance. The autograph score
indicates 24 oboes, 12 bassoons, 9 trumpets, 9 horns, and four sets of timpani.
It doesn’t say anything about strings, a condition supported by the King's own
dictate that there be "no fidles." However, it's not that simple
because an observer on the afternoon of rehearsal wrote that he witnessed some
100 musicians in the orchestra. Surely, this would suggest that Handel had
added about 40 or so strings, against the King's wishes. Moreover, Handel's own
later editions of the score indicate strings.
With no immediate, reliable written witnesses of that
first evening’s performance, we may never know which of the many recordings of
the Royal Fireworks Music is closest
to the historical event. Most recordings either use much-reduced forces, such
as here, or modern instruments, like Charles Mackerras's versions with full
orchestra and military band.
In any case, the Canadian-based period-instruments
ensemble Tafelmusik use a small group of players that includes strings. While the
full Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra includes six violins, two violas, two cellos,
a double bass, and about a dozen or more other players, their booklet picture
shows about sixteen people, which may be their actual complement for the Fireworks Music, I’m not sure. What is
clear is that the ensemble is quite a lot smaller than probably played on the
night of the work’s première; however, since subsequent performances in
Handel’s day saw greatly reduced forces, too, this is not an issue with the
Tafelmusik release. The present release, incidentally, is one the folks at
Tafelmusik originally issued in 1999 and are now reissuing on their own
Tafelmusik label. It’s good to have it back in the catalogue.
The Tafelmusik musicians under Ms. Lamon’s direction play
in their usual precise yet lively fashion. The speeds when moving along in the
faster sections never inch toward full-gallop mode but remain steady (and
heady) at a moderate pace. The timpani, too, make an exciting contribution.
This is no doubt one of the best performances one can buy in terms of execution
and playing, and for me it is second only to Trevor Pinnock’s recording with
the English Concert for Archiv. Still, the differences between Lamon’s version
and Pinnock’s are so close that choice may come down to a preference in sound.
Both sets offer elegant, thrilling performances.
Accompanying the Fireworks
Music are Handel’s Concerti a due
Cori Nos. 1-3. Although I would have preferred hearing Tafelmusik doing
Handel’s Water Music, a coupling we
find on many competing discs, the Concerti
are fine, and, of course, immaculately performed, the two choirs of wind
instruments particularly beguiling. Handel probably used these instrumental
suites between parts of his various oratorios, yet they are by no means
throwaway pieces. The first two works are the most exuberant and extroverted,
the third one more sedate.
The recording, made at Humbercrest United Church, Toronto,
Canada in 1997, makes the ensemble sound bigger than it is, thanks to the warm,
spacious acoustic. Nevertheless, it also provides a reasonable degree of
detail, with a full, rich tone. The recording hasn’t quite the midrange
transparency or immediacy of Pinnock’s account on Archiv, but it’s close. For
the person who hasn’t already investigated the Tafelmusik recording, there is
much delight in store.
Jun 7, 2012
Vienna (XRCD review)
Music of the Strausses and Weber. Fritz Reiner, Chicago Symphony
Orchestra. JVC JM-XR24025.
JJP
I love this stuff. I
love waltzes, the Strausses, conductor Fritz Reiner, the Chicago Symphony, and
audiophile remasterings such as this XRCD from JVC (Victor Corporation of
Japan). What I don’t particularly like is the cost. But with an
ever-diminishing list of audiophile material available to the music lover, I
suppose we should savor what little we have and be willing to pay the price.
Here are the upsides
to the JVC product: I like the music, of course, and the way Reiner plays it.
Like almost everything the man conducted, it comes out fresher, more pointed,
more secure, and more clarified than ever before. Sure, Willi Boskovsky put
more bounce, more verve, into in Strauss waltzes, but Reiner adds the element
of purity. I like the selections, three Strauss, Jr. waltzes: “Morning Papers,”
“Emperor Waltz,” and “On the Beautiful Blue Danube”; Strauss Jr.’s brother
Josef Strauss’s waltz “Village Swallows”; Karl Maria von Weber’s “Invitation to
the Dance”; and Richard Strauss’s “Der Rosenkavalier Waltzes.” And I like JVC’s
elegant packaging. Usually, I wouldn’t care for the Digipak approach. I always
worry that I’m going to damage a part of the center spindle and then be without
a case altogether. Yet JVC’s packaging is quite robust, and it simply looks
better than most other such housings I’ve come across, save for FIM/LIM’s.
Most important,
though, I like JVC’s impeccable 24-bit remasterings. Compared to RCA’s own release
of this material, the JVC product is clearer and tighter, with greater dynamic
impact. Using two separate CD players for instant comparisons (adjusting each
disc for equal volume and trading them out to ensure I wasn’t listening to the
sound of the players rather than the sound of the discs), I found the regular
RCA sounding very slightly softer and more veiled than the JVC remaster, with
less punch. Interestingly, the XRCD processing results in the JVC’s bass
seeming less loud, but in compensation we get a heightened force, impact, and
tautness, which is far more impressive than mere bass volume.
Still, there are
always downsides, and here are a few negative aspects of the JVC disc: It
doesn’t contain as much material as the RCA “Living Stereo” release, which also
includes not only the material from the original 1957 Vienna album but four additional Strauss waltzes from a later
Reiner recording. And the JVC issue is almost twice the price of the RCA.
Clearly, JVC XRCD’s
are not the most practical purchases in the world. They are for those few
pieces of music we cherish most and want to own and listen to in the absolute
best possible form. Sometimes, the very best costs extra.
Jun 5, 2012
Tchaikovsky: 1812 (UltraHD CD)
Also, Capriccio Italien; Cossack Dance. Erich Kunzel, Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra. LIM UHD 052.
“Caution! Digital
cannons. The cannons of the Telarc Digital 1812
are recorded at a very high level. Low listening levels are recommended for
initial playback until a safe level can be determined for your equipment.”
How many discs do
you know of that warn you in advance they can destroy your sound system?
As of this writing,
it’s been over three decades since Telarc first released its celebrated digital
recording of the 1812 Overture. That
was back in 1979, and it’s the recording with the big cannons that helped put
the company on the map. Telarc Records had already released several other vinyl
LP’s before then, but none of them had made the impression the 1812 did. Now, the folks at LIM (Lasting
Impression Music), the affiliate label of FIM (First Impression Music), have
used some of the world’s most-advanced audio techniques to remaster the work on
CD in their Ultra High Definition, 32-bit mastering process. If you’re an
audiophile, you probably already have a few of producer-owner Winston Ma’s FIM
and LIM discs in your collection, and you know what they can do. If so, this
Telarc remaster might be just the thing to show off your system.
Anyway, Peter
Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) wrote his 1812
Overture in 1880 to commemorate Russia's defense of Moscow against
Napoleon's advancing army at the 1812 Battle of Borodino. As usual with the
composer, he didn’t think much of his own work. He complained that he was
"not a conductor of festival pieces" and that the Overture would be "very loud and
noisy, but without artistic merit because I wrote it without warmth and without
love.” Be that as it may, along with a couple of his ballets, it has become his
most-famous and most-performed work.
The 1812 opens softly with low cellos and
violas playing the introduction. Be sure to keep the volume low or you may be
sorry later on. The dynamic range is huge. This is one of the late Maestro
Erich Kunzel’s more-animated performances, so you’ll enjoy how he creates,
expands, and releases some finely tuned outbursts of energy. This is
celebratory music, after all, and Kunzel makes sure we understand that.
Overall, though, I admit I am still not quite as thrilled by Kunzel’s approach
to the piece as most listeners, my finding it too often a little pedestrian and
middle-of-the-road. I prefer the greater excitement of Andre Previn and the LSO
(EMI), Sian Edwards and the Liverpool Philharmonic (EMI), or Antal Dorati and
his old Minnesota players (Decca/Mercury). What I liked most on Kunzel’s disc,
though, was his sunny yet urgent reading of the Capriccio Italien; and the listener might find the disc worth its asking
price for that alone. The other track is the “Cossack Dance” from Mazeppa, which is quite brief.
Nevertheless, this
Telarc recording is really about the sound. It’s an audiophile disc of the
first order, and the more-than-acceptable performance of the 1812 is merely a secondary
consideration. As we would expect, Telarc’s patented big bass drum does its
best to keep our attention, and the cannons go off loudly enough to rupture a
speaker cone. Indeed, as I mentioned before, Telarc and LIM warn us throughout
the packaging to keep the volume initially low until we can determine a safe
level of playback for our system. However, they don’t exactly clue us in as to
what that safe level may be, as the cannons don’t come into the picture until
the very end of the piece, by which time it may be too late. Then, Telarc/LIM
exacerbate the problem with a lower-than-average playback level to begin with,
about six or eight decibels lower than the output of most other classical CD’s,
which may encourage some listeners to turn things up too high in the first
place just hear it. Remember, there is an enormous dynamic range involved,
meaning the difference between the softest and loudest notes. So if it starts
quietly, you can be assured it will get louder before long.
Telarc recorded the
album at Music Hall, Cincinnati, in 1978, releasing it the following year. LIM
remastered it in their Ultra High Definition, 32-bit processing format in 2011,
releasing it in 2012. The remaster is as free from distortion as anything you’re
liable to hear, reproducing Telarc’s already splendid sound to the fullest and
most natural. Not only is the bass deep (a booklet note says the cannon fire
dips down as low as six cycles), the imaging is excellent, left-to-right and
back-to-front. What’s more, we get wonderfully clear, clean, extended highs,
especially evident in the Capriccio.
In addition, given
its lovely, high-gloss, hardcover packaging, its twenty-page bound booklet, and
its static-proof inner sleeve, the LIM product is about as audiophile as they
come. Just don’t think it comes cheap. For a complete listing of FIM/LIM
products, you can visit their Web site at http://www.firstimpressionmusic.com/.
JJP
Jun 4, 2012
Fasch: Orchestral Suites (CD review)
Pal Nemeth, Capella
Savaria. Dynamic DM8029.
Who? German
violinist, composer, and kapellmeister Johann Friedrich Fasch (1688-1758) was
another of those artists that audiences and critics respected during his
lifetime but whose music soon faded into obscurity after his death. Remember,
there were no phonograph records and no radio or television to keep the musical
arts alive, and with changing attitudes in music, changing instruments, and
changing orchestral sizes, older ideas often died or got lost along with their
composers. Critics of Fasch’s day thought so much of the man, they would often
hold his music in the same regard as that of Bach and Telemann. The present disc
contains three of his orchestral compositions representative of his work.
The Suite in F major,
a six-movement suite, starts with a typically French-sounding overture. Played
by the Capella Savaria, a Hungarian period-instruments ensemble under the
directorship of Pal Nemeth, the suite displays a pleasing and lively spirit.
After the overture, there continue the usual dances and interludes: airs,
bourrées, gavottes, plaisanteries (amusing pleasantries), and, of course,
minuets, which end each suite.
For me, the most-delightful work on the program is the
little Suite in D major, also in six
movements. It has a most-regal and stately overture that is quite fetching.
Nemeth then infuses the rest of the suite with an equal charm. The music is
light and flowing, never raucous, edgy, or annoying in any way, the airs
particularly lyrical and sweet, especially the second one.
The disc concludes with the longest of the selections, the
Suite in A minor, containing ten
movements. If one is listening to the album straight through, yet another of
these sets may be a bit much, but taken one suite at a time, they can be quite
satisfying. Anyhow, the A minor Suite
starts in a more serious fashion than the others, finally giving way to a
breezier, rhythmic pulse and more courtly moods. As before, the Capella Savaria
play with vigor and finesse, and Maestro Nemeth’s direction appears impeccable.
Recorded at Saleszianer Theater, Szombathely, Hungary in
1999 and re-released by the Dynamic label in 2012, the sound is warmly and
spaciously vibrant. The theater exhibits a rich, resplendent resonance, and
together with the engineers capturing a good left-to-right and front-to-back
image, the sonics are as lifelike as possible. The idea here was not to
reproduce the most-transparent midrange but the most-realistic overall
impression. In this regard, one must
count the recording a success.
JJP
Jun 1, 2012
Rodrigo: Concierto de Aranjuez (HQCD review)
Also, Concierto
serenata for harp. Narciso Yepes,
guitar; Ataulfo Argenta, Spanish National Orchestra; Nicanor Zabaleta, harp;
Ernst Maerzendorfer, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. HDTT HQCD259.
JJP
First, a brief, and I think remarkable, coincidence. About
three weeks before this writing, I was listening to the car radio and the
station was playing Rodrigo’s Concierto
de Aranjuez. By whom I don’t remember, but it got me to thinking about the
first recording I ever owned of the piece. It was by Spanish guitarist Narciso
Yepes and conductor Ataulfo Argenta with the Spanish National Orchestra on a
London LP that I bought sometime in the 1960’s, a recording I dearly loved but
had long ago abandoned at the outset of the CD era, figuring to replace it with
the equivalent silver disc. It didn’t happen, and I finally forgot all about
it. So, after the radio reminded me of the recording, I set out to buy a CD
copy, to no avail. Decca had either never released the Yepes performance on CD
or it was so long out of print that nobody had even a used Decca or London copy
available. It hugely disappointed me. Then I happened to check HDTT’s Web site,
and lo and behold, they had just remastered it! Sometimes, I think I’m psychic.
And hugely happy.
Joaquin Rodrigo (1901-1999) wrote the Concierto de Aranjuez for guitar and orchestra in 1939, and it
eventually established Rodrigo’s reputation as a leading composer for the
classical guitar. I say “eventually” because it wasn’t until Yepes and Argenta
recorded it in monaural in the late Forties that it really took off worldwide.
Even though Yepes would record the work again several times, this 1959 Decca
release remastered by HDTT is their best collaboration, and I still think one
of the best versions, if not the best
version, of it on record. Best of all, on HDTT it’s even better than I
remembered, sonically and musically.
Anyway, despite the fact that Rodrigo always claimed the
gardens of the Palacio Real de Aranjuez had inspired his writing the piece, one
can’t help thinking that, given the year of its publication, the tragedy of the
Spanish Civil War didn’t tinge it with melancholy. Rodrigo’s wife denied this,
saying the slow movement drew on their happy days together and a miscarriage
she endured. Whatever, it’s a lovely, evocative piece of music, and, as I say,
nobody did it better than Yepes and Argenta.
The composer described the first movement Allegro con spirito as "animated by
a rhythmic spirit and vigour without either of the two themes interrupting its
relentless pace." Here, Yepes is lively but gentle, too, an ideal lead-in
to the tenderness of the famous Adagio
that follows.
Rodrigo said that the second movement "represents a
dialogue between guitar and solo instruments” (cor anglais, bassoon, oboe, horn
etc.). What he didn’t say was how utterly beautiful is was, something
performances after performances have been saying for over seventy years. Yepes
says it best with an interpretation filled with tenderness, naturally, and
hushed passion. Some critics found Yepes too mechanical or even too
lackadaisical, particularly during his later years. That may be; I haven't
heard much from him. But not here. Finding a perfect partnership with Maestro
Argenta, who helped tutor the young guitarist early in his career, Yepes
produces one of the finest, most complete realizations of the score possible.
Then there’s that perky little closing tune, the one
Rodrigo said "recalls a courtly dance in which the combination of double
and triple time maintains a taut tempo right to the closing bar." Yepes
takes it at a moderate gait, without going all crazy with it. It closes the
piece adeptly, maintaining the light, flower-scented mood of the rest of the
work. After all, Rodrigo had described the concerto itself as capturing
"the fragrance of magnolias, the singing of birds, and the gushing of
fountains" in the gardens of Aranjuez. Yepes takes him at his word.
Other guitarists have done justice to Rodrigo’s
masterpiece, to be sure, and I would not want to be without Bonell, Williams,
Bream, the various Romeros, and others. However, for an all-around engaging,
entrancing, spontaneous realization in early though still state-of-the-art
sound, it’s hard to beat this Yepes-Argenta partnership in its present
remastering.
The disc’s coupling, the Concierto serenta for harp and orchestra (1952) seems to have been
Rodrigo’s attempt to duplicate the success of Aranjuez, this time using the harp. Certainly, no recording of it
has surpassed that of Nicano Zabeleta and conductor Ernst Maerzendorfer for
pure, magical charm. It makes a most-attractive pairing.
HDTT remastered the Aranjuez
from a London LP, recorded in 1957 and released in 1959, HDTT burning it to an
HQCD. The sonics have an excellent depth of field, the listener able to hear
sounds well back into the orchestra with a realistic sense of air and space
around them. Transient attack is sharp and strong, the guitar a little close
but still quite natural and lifelike. With the remastering engineer’s judicious
use of noise reduction, the recording sounds as quiet, clear, and clean as any
new product. Rodrigo’s Harp Concerto
comes from a DG LP made a few years later than the Aranjuez. While the Harp
recording doesn’t have as much transparency or immediacy as the Aranjuez, it is still pleasant in a
slightly flatter, more hi-fi sort of way.
HDTT make the music available in a variety of formats for
a variety of pocketbooks, from Redbook CD’s, 24/96 DVD’s, and HQCD’s to 24/96
and 24/192 Flac downloads for playback on high-end computer audio systems. For
details, visit http://www.highdeftapetransfers.com/storefront.php.