William Tell,
Silken Ladder, Il Signor Bruschino, and more. Christian Benda, Prague Sinfonia
Orchestra. Naxos 8.570934.
These days most people know Italian composer Gioacchino
Rossini (1792-1868) best for his overtures, of which he wrote a slew. Here, we
have the second of four discs from Christian Benda and his Prague Sinfonia
Orchestra, a set that encompasses all the overtures the man wrote.
There are any number of good recordings of Rossini
overtures, and Benda gives us yet another good choice. Still, as I’ve said
before, one needs to consider the competition before making any hasty
decisions, and we already have Neville Marriner’s complete, three-disc set from
Philips, a long-gone label but one still available new and used for a
reasonable (sometimes absurdly low) price. And if it’s only a single disc of
the most-popular overtures you’re interested in, you can find excellent
bargains from the likes of, again, Marriner (Philips, PentaTone, or EMI), the
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra (DG), Fritz Reiner (RCA), Piero Gamba (Decca or JVC),
Peter Maag (HDTT), Riccardo Muti (EMI), Claudio Abbado (DG), Riccardo Chailly
(Decca), Carlo Maria Giulini (EMI), Sir Roger Norrington (EMI), and
others. Still, Benda’s performances
stand up to the best, and the Naxos sound and price are right.
Anyway, it is Benda’s apparent decision to include a few
of the most-popular Rossini overtures on each of his four discs, along with
several lesser-known overtures. Accordingly, Benda begins the program on Volume
2 with the biggest gun in the Rossini arsenal, Guillaume Tell, the “William Tell” overture (you can here a snippet
below). As you probably know, Rossini divided the overture into four separate
sections or movements: the Prelude or
Dawn; the Storm; the pastorale or
“Call to the Cows”; and the famous closing galop
or “March of the Swiss Soldiers.” In terms of Benda’s interpretation, I suppose
you could say that three out of four ain’t bad. Dawn arrives dramatically, with appropriate atmosphere; the Storm erupts with much sound and fury;
the pastorale is serenely blissful;
but the galop lacks the thrills
provided by any number of other conductors. The Prague Sinfonia play well
enough, and there’s no denying the music has elegance. Just not quite all the
excitement one may expect, closer to an analytical approach in the end. Benda’s
reading appears aimed more toward the pure music lover than the Lone Ranger fan, which is not
altogether a bad thing.
The other big guns on the program are the overtures to the
comic operas La scala di seta (“The
Silken Ladder”) and Il Signor Bruschino
(“Signor Bruschino, or The Son by Chance”), which Maestro Benda handles with
grace, wit, and refinement. La scala di
seta displays a good deal of zip and pizzazz; it’s truly an exhilarating
experience, with a light, easy step for so quick a tempo. In Signor Bruschino we find both elegance
and charm, yet Benda’s performance is not without a properly playful stress on
the tapping of the bows.
Then, there are the less well-known works: the overtures
to Eduardo
e Cristina (“Eduardo and Cristina”), L’inganno
felice (“The Happy Deception”), Demetrio
e Polibio (“Demetrius and Polybius”), and Sigismondo (“Sigismondo, King of Poland”), and the very early
non-overture Sinfonia di Bologna,
which Rossini wrote in his teens. These overtures are from largely serious, or
at least semi-serious, operas, with an emphasis on typically Italian melodrama.
Thus, you can expect Benda to be pretty earnest in all of it. Nevertheless,
there is a goodly portion of lyrical delight throughout the pieces. This is
especially true of Eduardo e Cristina,
which demonstrates Benda’s ability to convey romance and adventure effectively.
One can perhaps see why not all of Rossini’s operas and
overtures gained a full measure of popularity over the years. The fact is, not
all of them contain the particularly inventive touches or memorable melodies.
Even so, Maestro Benda makes a good case for all of them, infusing them with an
élan that tends to carry the day.
If there is any one drawback I could name, though, it
might be that there is less than an hour of material on the disc, including the
non-overture. I can’t help thinking that Naxos could probably have included all
of the overtures on three discs rather than four. Nevertheless, at so
affordable a price, I shouldn’t complain.
Naxos recorded the music at Kulturni dum Barikadniku,
Prague, Czech Republic, in 2011 and at Produkcni dum Vzlet, Prague, in 2012.
The sound they obtained is quite good, well balanced, with no undue forwardness
or dullness, a well-extended treble, fine low-end definition, solid midrange
clarity and definition, reasonably sharp transient response, and overall taut
impact. There is also a wide stereo spread and a modest amount of orchestral
depth. A small degree of soft warmth tends to make the sound easier on the ear
than it would otherwise. In all, this is one of Naxos’s better-sounding discs.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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