Also, Symphonic
Dances. Leonard Slatkin, Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Naxos 8.573051.
Russian pianist and composer Sergei Rachmaninov
(1873-1943) completed his Symphony No. 3
in A minor, Op. 44 in 1936. It would be his last symphony. These days, we
see it as something of a transition for the composer, being less overtly
Romantic than his Symphony No. 2, Piano
Concertos Nos. 2 and 3, or the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini. The Third Symphony is also more concise than
his previous works, pointing toward the greater modernity he would reluctantly
adopt. Still, it is most definitely Russian in flavor, especially noticeable in
the finale’s dance rhythms, and surely it is still Romantic in spirit. Leopold
Stokowski conducted the Third Symphony’s
premiere in 1936 with the Philadelphia Orchestra, and Stokowski’s much-later
recording of it for EMI with the London Symphony is still the one to own.
Nevertheless, this new rendering from Naxos with Leonard Slatkin and the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra is no slouch.
The Third Symphony
received an odd reception at first. Critics thought that it was still too
Romantic in nature, that the composer had never gone beyond the Romantic
period, beyond the Second Symphony or
the Second and Third Piano Concertos. The public at large, on the other hand,
found the Third too modern and not
Romantic enough. They expected more of the lush, spacious tunes found in the
aforementioned works. Poor Rachmaninov: He couldn’t win for losing. I suppose
that battle continues to this day; most critics expect modern composers to
produce new, imaginative, innovative material, and many in the public just want
something they can whistle on their way home from the concert hall.
Another unusual feature about the Third Symphony is that Rachmaninov wrote it in only three
movements. However, the second movement is really a combed Adagio and scherzo, so maybe that gives the work a traditional
four-movement arrangement after all. The first-movement Allegro holds many surprises, the two-part Adagio is conservative but committed, and the third-movement Allegro vivace is exhilarating.
Maestro Slatkin
catches most of the passion and drama of the first movement while sustaining
its lyrical qualities at the same time. He does not linger on or draw out the
movement as much as Stokowski did, preferring to step along at a fairly quick
gait. Regardless, the movement never seems short of breath, and Slatkin does
emphasize the big themes with a gracious hand, making them appear as broadly
lyrical as ever.
In the second
movement Adagio, Slatkin slows down
appropriately and takes his time defining the music’s poetic features. When an
allegro vivace section breaks out, Slatkin handles it with a zesty good humor
before things settle back to the sweetness of the opening.
Then Slatkin
concludes the symphony with all the dash and élan the finale requires. Some
conductors allow the movement to sink into the sentimentality of a Hollywood
epic, but Slatkin ends it in a straightforward blaze of glory, the veiled Dies irae theme sounding appropriately
ominous and resplendently optimistic at the same time.
As a companion piece, the disc includes Rachmaninov’s Symphonic Dances, Op. 45, written in
1940 and among the composer’s last works. Slatkin pulls this quasi-symphony off
pretty well, too, but unfortunately for him he has stiff competition from the
justly celebrated Reference Recordings disc with Maestro Eiji Oue and the
Minnesota Orchestra. That recording is so overwhelming colossal, it tends to
dwarf everything that comes up against it. Be that as it may, Slatkin brings a
nobility and dignity to the score that I often find lacking in other
recordings, the conductor ending the piece on a triumphant note, this time with
the Dies irae (again) hardly
disguised. In all, we get fine, grand, bold, powerful, poetic results from
Slatkin and his Detroit forces in both the Third
Symphony and the Symphonic Dances.
The Detroit Symphony was one of the stars of early stereo
in the late Fifties and early Sixties, thanks to their participation in a number
of fine recordings on Mercury Living Presence. This time out, Naxos recorded
the music at the Detroit Symphony’s home, Orchestra Hall, in 2011-2012, and the
orchestra’s star still shines. Interestingly, though, while the new Naxos
digital recording is good, it is not really an improvement over the old
Mercurys, which hold up to this day as some of the finest recordings you can
find.
Anyway, the Naxos sound has fitting power and strong
impact, with a reasonably wide dynamic range. It’s also ultrasmooth, with a
mild resonance providing a warm glow around the music. Midrange transparency
suffers slightly (especially compared to those old Mercury discs), but it
remains pleasing all the same. Bass extension is taut and deep; and even though
highs can seem at times a tad soft, they show good extension when necessary.
What’s more, the left-to-right stereo spread sounds impressive, with a decent
localization of instruments and a modest orchestral depth.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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