Marek Janowski,
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande. PentaTone PTC 5186 450.
With the Fourth
Symphony Maestro Marek Janowski and the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande
(Orchestra of French-speaking Switzerland) complete their recordings of the
complete Bruckner symphonies. The question at this point, I suppose, is why? If
this performance of the Fourth Symphony
is any indication, the affair seems rather ordinary. I mean no disrespect, but
there is little about Janowski’s interpretation or the orchestra’s playing that
appears any better or any different than most anybody else’s, and I can think
of at least half a dozen other recordings of the Fourth I like better. Be that as it may, Janowski’s Fourth is competent almost to the
letter, so there is little to complain about. If you already own his other
recordings in the series of nine symphonies, you will no doubt enjoy this final
installment as well.
Anton Bruckner (1824-1896) wrote his Symphony No. 4
“Romantic” in E flat major in 1874, revising it several times before his
death. (Janowski chose to record the Nowak edition of the 1878-80 revision).
The symphony became probably the Austrian composer’s most-popular piece of
music, due largely to its abundance of Romantic, dramatic, programmatic, and
spiritual touches. However, there are so many recordings of it available, some
of them by very prominent conductors and orchestras like Eugen Jochum and the
Berlin Philharmonic (DG), Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic (DG),
Gunther Wand and the Berlin Philharmonic (RCA), Otto Klemperer and the
Philharmonia Orchestra (EMI), Karl Bohm and the Vienna Philharmonic (Decca),
Georg Tintner and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra (Naxos), and the like,
it would take a very distinguished newcomer to make a dent in the competition.
For me, Maestro Janowski doesn’t quite make it to the top of the pile.
Anyway, as you may recall, the composer tells us what each
of the movements represents, from knights riding out of a medieval castle
through the mists of dawn to the sounds of the forest and birds, to a funeral,
then a hunt, complete with horn calls, and then a brilliant culminating
summation. Bruckner was a profoundly spiritual man, and his symphonies
illustrate the point, with the Fourth
Symphony being the most programmatic of all.
In the first movement, we have Bruckner's vision of
Nature, and his several scenic landscapes remind us of how much the composer
admired both Beethoven and Wagner. Janowski captures the opening grandeur of
the music pretty well, although he doesn't transition into the more tranquil
material like the "Magic of the Forest" and "Birdsong" as
well as I've heard from other conductors. With Janowski it's more all of a
piece. Perhaps that was his intent, intentionally to minimize the contrasting
elements of the first movement and make the music more seamless. I'm not sure
that was Bruckner's intent, but I can't say I disliked it. Janowski does end the
movement on a powerful note, however, which helps make up for any possible
laxness earlier.
The second-movement Andante
should sound at least vaguely elegiac, halfway between a nocturne and a march,
at a slow but comfortably moderate pace (quasi
Allegretto). Janowski takes it in leisurely fashion, allowing full
expression to the lyrical elements yet rather losing a bit of forward impetus
in the process. The music never quite attains the level of spiritual expression
it should.
Following that we find a lively Scherzo, which Bruckner teasingly called “a rabbit hunt,” which
should build a proper momentum as it progresses. Here, the conductor does go
full bore, appropriately, the horns blasting away splendidly. And this time,
Janowski does point up the movement's contrasts in sharp relief. The orchestra,
too, sounds fine, if a little thin in the overall richness department. I doubt
anyone would mistake this ensemble for the Berlin or Vienna Philharmonics, but
it does its job with a minimum of fuss.
Lastly, in the Finale,
as with the Scherzo, Bruckner again
takes the heroic opening theme and the more-idyllic second subject and reworks
them into his closing statement, although he keeps it more cheerful. As though
finally warming to the subject, Janowski gives the finale a grand send-off. It
nicely unifies the previously executed themes without any too-obvious
references or backward glances. It's Janowski's Finale that highlights the performance, and he brings the symphony
to a close in a swirl of powerful, loud and quiet, motifs. Unfortunately for
me, I still found the movement too long for my liking with its never-ending
succession of false climaxes, and not even Janowski could ameliorate that
condition.
As I say, Janowski's performance is perfectly serviceable,
if not always inspiring.
Producer Job Maarse and engineers Erdo Groot and Roger de
Schot recorded the symphony in Victoria Hall, Geneva, Switzerland, October
2012. The disc comes in a hybrid Super Audio Compact Disc stereo/multichannel
format, playable in stereo on any ordinary CD player and in stereo and
multichannel from a SACD player. The sound has a good sense of ambient bloom,
even in the SACD two-channel layer to which I listened. I would imagine the
sound to open up even further in multichannel. There is also a good impact to
the dynamics and a fairly wide stereo spread. Midrange transparency, frequency
extremes, and orchestral depth, while not quite being in the audiophile range,
are more than adequate.
JJP
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
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