Most casual
listeners probably know English composer Sir Edward Elgar (1857-1934) for his Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 more
than anything he wrote, but his Cello
Concerto comes close. He wrote it toward the end of his career in 1919, and
because he published it just after the close of the Great War, a lot of it
sounds pretty melancholy and solemn. Nevertheless, it has become one of his
most-popular works. Cellist Zuill Bailey, Maestro Krzysztof Urbanski, and the
Indianapolis Symphony do a fine job with it, even though the 1965 EMI recording
with cellist Jacqueline du Pre, conductor John Barbirolli, and the LSO remains
a benchmark in the piece.
Elgar once remarked
that he preferred vigorous readings of his works because “I am not an austere
man.” Zuill apparently takes the composer at his word, producing a robust,
responsive, yet earnest and mature interpretation.
The first movement
of the Concerto offers a pensive,
bittersweet reminiscence of a quieter, more placid world before the War. The
second movement Scherzo seems to
represent the War itself, and the final two movements the War’s aftermath.
The opening Adagio
has a big, bold part for the cello that starts immediately, although it strikes
a rather solemn mood and grave air. Under Bailey this opening is dark-toned,
brawny, and deeply affecting. Although the introduction may be long, slow, and
heavy, Bailey makes it alive and exhilarating. The cellist never becomes morbid
or depressing but projects the flowing, pensive state of a barely suppressed
melancholy. Then, in the Scherzo he
adds an aura of light with a really zippy pace, cavorting here and there with
the orchestra as though a leaf in the wind. Following that, the third-movement Adagio--the soul of the work--seems more
than reflective or contemplative; it seems a full-blown lamentation, most
touching, if a little jarring in its musical juxtaposition with the preceding Scherzo. Nevertheless, as Elgar and
Bailey remind us, war can be more than jarring.
In the finale, Elgar
is all over the place, marking it “Allegro - Moderato - Allegro, ma non
troppo.” Bailey keeps it part grave, part celebratory. The Great War,
devastating in its consequences, was over, and there were new opportunities on
the horizon, a new world shaping up. Things begin in a big, breezy style, which
Bailey handles in big, bold fashion; then it transitions into various guises:
lyrical, energetic, enthusiastic, melodramatic, sad, quiet, and, finally,
exuberant. One could hardly ask for a more expressive rendering than that which
Bailey gives us.
The coupling seems a
bit odd to me, three selections from Ma
Vlast (“My Homeland”), the set of six tone poems by Czech composer Bedrich
Smetana (1824-1884). I suppose the lives of the two composers on the disc did
overlap somewhat, and certainly both the Cello
Concerto and Ma Vlast concern
issues of war and peace. Still, it seems a stretch. Besides, why only three
selections from Smetana’s poem cycle? Why not four? There was room on the disc.
Or, better yet, why not the complete work on a separate disc? Who knows. Maybe the
orchestra only played three movements at the concert from which Telarc produced
the album. I’m sure we should be grateful for what we have.
Whatever, the three
Smetana pieces are “Vysehrad” (The High Castle), “Vltava” (The Moldau), and
“Sarka.” Having heard so many fine recordings of the entire work over the years
from so many fine conductors like Vaclav Neumann (Berlin Classics), Raphael Kubelik
(Supraphon), Antal Dorati (Philips or Newton Classics), Paavo Berglund (EMI),
Libor Pesek (Virgin), Antoni Wit (Naxos), and others, I couldn’t see as much
color in Urbanski’s accounts of the scores. While one cannot seriously fault
Urbanski’s performance, there is not a lot in it that sounds significantly
better than what we already have. Even the currents of the Moldau seem to be
moving too fast and too perfunctorily for us to appreciate them.
Telarc recorded the
music live in concert at the Hilbert Circle Theater, Indianapolis, Indiana, in
2012. They miked it fairly close up, presumably to minimize audience noise, and
in this regard it largely succeeds. There is little commotion from the folks in
the seats. The cello is front and center, as we would expect, maybe a tad too
much so. The orchestra sometimes appears a bit too far behind them rather than
around them. Still, it all sounds quite nice, with a modest degree of depth and
air to the orchestra. I suspect it’s just about the kind of sound the composer
wanted, in any case. It’s a good, solid sound, with plenty of firm control.
Unfortunately, the
Telarc engineers did not edit out the closing applause for each work, so our
concentration gets disrupted at the end of each piece. Alas....
To hear a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
JJP
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