Also, Tod und Verklarung.
Francois-Xavier Roth, SWR Sinfonieorchester Baden-Baden un Freiburg. Hanssler
Classic CD 93.299.
Is it really such tall leap from the heroic swagger of
Franz Liszt’s Les Preludes to the
heroic swagger of Richard Strauss’s Ein
Heldenleben? From Strauss’s Ein
Heldenleben to Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s The Sea Hawk? Or from Korngold’s Sea Hawk to John Williams’s Star
Wars? I think not. All composers owe
a little something to those who went before them, and Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben (“A Hero’s Life”) was a
natural step in the progression of the tone poem, here given a rousing
rendition by Maestro Francois-Xavier Roth and his Southwest German Radio Orchestra.
What’s more, the orchestra plays with the precision and solidity you would
expect of a thoroughly polished German ensemble, helping Roth immensely to
recreate Strauss’s picturesque musical poem.
A note before we continue, though, about the ensemble
involved, courtesy of Wikipedia: “The Southwest German Radio Symphony Orchestra
(also known in English as the SWR Baden-Baden and Freiburg Symphony Orchestra
or SWR Symphony Orchestra, and in German as the Sinfonieorchester des
Südwestrundfunks or SWR Sinfonieorchester) is a radio orchestra located in the
German cities of Baden-Baden and Freiburg.” Francois-Xavier Roth has been the
orchestra’s Chief Conductor since 2011. Now that we’ve cleared that up, on to
the music.
The German composer and conductor Richard Strauss
(1864-1949) wrote Ein Heldenleben in
1899 as a kind of tongue-in-cheek autobiography, a semi-serious self-portrait.
Strauss was only thirty-four years old at the time, showing his supreme
self-confidence by writing a musical autobiography as he did at such an early
age. Mainly, though, he seems to have written it to get in a few digs at his
critics, whom he convincingly silences through the music.
Strauss divided Ein
Heldenleben into seven parts describing seven stages in the artist’s life.
The first segment, “The Hero,” obviously describes Strauss himself and does so
on a large, swashbuckling scale. Here, Maestro Roth is appropriately dashing,
with plenty of panache. Next, the music turns to “The Hero’s Adversaries,” his
critics, where we hear them squabbling among themselves in amusing fashion;
Roth captures their trivialities, yet their possibly sinister nature as well.
Following that is “The Hero’s Companion,” his wife, whom violinist Christian
Ostertag sweetly defines in solo; then in the ensuing “Love Scene” we find from
Roth not only a loving, harmonious wife but an apparently complex one.
“The Hero’s Battlefield” is the centerpiece of the work,
where Strauss engages in all-out war with his critics, reminding them
(musically) of his accomplishments with bits from Don Juan and Zarathustra,
as well as a few horns from Beethoven’s Eroica
Symphony. Roth provides it with an adequate urgency and excitement without
too much hectic, bombastic action.
“The Hero’s Works of Peace” is another slow movement,
again a remembrance of the composer’s previous tone poems as an almost-final
rebuke of his foes. After that, the work closes with “The Hero’s Retirement
from the World and His Fulfillment,” the longest movement, a concluding note of
possible contentment and repose for a life of art well spent. However, Roth
ends the piece more ominously than most conductors, so there’s still a question
about the hero’s actual resolution of his problems.
Tod und Verklarung
(“Death and Transfiguration”), which Strauss wrote in 1889, a full ten years
before Ein Heldenleben, is much more
serious in tone than the more playful later work, yet it pursues a similar
theme. It describes the death of an artist, who, as he lies dying, thinks of
life, the innocence of childhood, the struggles of manhood, and the achievement
of goals. Finally, the artist receives a desired transfiguration "from the
infinite reaches of heaven.” It is, perhaps, the kind of reflection on death
that only a very young (or a very old) man could write.
Roth takes his time to develop the various motifs in Tod und Verklarung, keeping everything
as somber as I’ve heard, yet without being too maudlin about it. In fact, in
some sections Roth will positively startle you from your seat. Of course, the
excellent recording helps here, too.
As this is apparently the first volume of Maestro Roth’s Strauss tone
poems, he’s off to an auspicious start.
Hanssler Classic recorded the music at the Konzerthaus,
Freiburg, Germany, in November 2012, and they did a really good of it. The
acoustic sounds very spacious, with a realistic hall ambience. There is a good
tonal balance, with perhaps a hint of mid-treble brightness and a slight
veiling but in general more than enough detailing. A nicely controlled low end
helps, too, given the resonance of the venue. The dynamic impact is moderate,
the stereo spread wide, and the depth of image impressive. It’s a fine,
lifelike presentation.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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