Also, three
Slavonic Dances. Jose Serebrier, Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Warner
Classics 2564 64527-6.
Czech composer Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904) wrote nine symphonies,
but it seems as though only the final three get any real love, at least insofar
as recordings go. The few recordings of the Second
Symphony we find usually come in complete sets because it’s really too long
to couple with another Dvorak symphony on a single disc, and it’s not popular
enough to sell a lot of single discs. Still, that isn’t stopping veteran
conductor Jose Serebrier from continuing his march through the complete Dvorak
symphonies, the current album being the fourth volume in the series.
Nevertheless, because there aren’t a lot of single-disc performances of the Second, especially new digital ones,
Serebrier almost has the field to himself. It doesn’t matter; his
interpretation with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra would no doubt hold up
reasonably well no matter how crowded the field.
Dvorak wrote the Symphony
No. 2 in B flat major, Op. 4 in 1865, but he was so poor at the time he
couldn’t even afford to have it bound. It finally premiered in 1888, getting
all of one performance during the composer’s lifetime; not exactly an
auspicious start for the young Dvorak or his second symphonic work.
Fortunately, that doesn’t stop Maestro Serebrier from giving it his all.
The Second Symphony
is a fairly light work, lyrical, bucolic, and agreeable. That’s the way
Serebrier approaches it, with a strong, lively spirit yet with good humor and a
pastoral outlook as well. The conductor maintains moderately quick tempos
throughout, giving the piece a peppy yet easygoing amiability. The Second is essentially a cheerful, often
gentle work, and Serebrier keeps it that way.
The symphony begins with a lengthy introduction, followed
by a moderately more aggressive tune, an exposition, recapitulation, and coda,
all in pretty much an Allegro con moto
tempo as Dvorak indicates. Throughout this fifteen-minute movement, Serebrier
and the Bournemouth players sound elegant and refined, even though he moves
things along at a moderately rapid gait. The music may not be entirely
memorable, but the conductor handles it in a fluid, fluent manner that makes it
quite easy to take.
Under Serebrier the second-movement Adagio is peaceful and serene, a quiet tranquility pervading the
scene, tinged with a touch of romantic melancholy. Next, we get what by
Dvorak’s standards is an extra-long Scherzo,
in which Serebrier finds suitable joy handling the varied and abundant themes.
Then comes a finale of great exuberance and even greater
extravagance, the various melodies practically falling over one another. Here,
Serebrier seems a bit more hesitant than in the previous sections of the
symphonies. It's trifling, but he does appear to slow the pace a tad, at least
in places, rather starting and stopping more than necessary. In any case, no
harm done, and the conductor takes the music out on a grand, broad,
Tchaikovsky-like sweep. Neither the symphony nor Serebrier's reading of it will
probably win any awards, but it is doubtless satisfying and certainly more than
competent.
Coupled with the symphony we find three of Dvorak's Slavonic Dances from 1878 and 1886: Nos. 3 and 6 from Op. 46 and No. 7
from Op. 72. They are brief, about three to five minutes apiece, and they
demonstrate the composer's later, more concise, more familiar style, with which
he won his first international success. If Serebrier loses a little something
in the way of rustic charm, he does give the music a lovely, effortless appeal,
and they do, in fact, surpass the Symphony
No. 2 in almost every way despite their brevity. Indeed, it may be their
very conciseness that makes the Dances
so delightful, filled as they are with lilting, high-spirited good will.
Warner Classics producer Alexander van Ingen and engineers
Mike Hatch and Mike Cox recorded the music at the Lighthouse concert hall,
Poole, England in 2013. Very nicely recorded, too, spacious and open, and very,
very smooth. It's a tad close for my liking, but it's not distracting; it just
decreases somewhat the sense of depth and dimensionality in the music.
Dynamics, impact, and frequency extensions in the bass and treble are adequate,
though not outstanding, and midrange definition is fine. The recording may not
rank in the upper echelons of audiophile perfection, but like the performances
it is easy on the ear and quite pleasant.
JJP
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
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