Until fairly recently,
posterity’s verdict on the music of
Johann Nepomuk Hummel (who for some
reason makes every reviewer’s list of
"Composers Who Are Always Identified
by All Three Names"…) has been
slightly tinged with condescension.
He was one of the first virtuoso pianist/composers,
and not surprisingly the bulk of his
compositional output consisted of works
suitable for his own performance, either
for piano solo or piano in combination
with chamber ensembles. While skillfully
written and undeniably effective, many
of these works have justifiably been
characterized as facile, showy and relatively
shallow. Hummel’s reputation hasn’t
been helped, either, by the fact that
his most productive years were overshadowed
by two colossi: Haydn and Beethoven.
No doubt, Hummel’s
output is often lacking in High Seriousness
(relative to Beethoven’s) and sheer
melodic/rhythmic genius (relative to
Haydn’s). However, seeing as how both
of those gentleman had complimentary
things to say about Hummel’s music,
it hardly seems fair to relegate him
to the historical purgatory reserved
for "interesting" composers.
Of course, he was
quite an "interesting" man,
if only because of the company he kept!
His teachers included Mozart,
Haydn, Clementi and Beethoven; his pupils
included Henselt, Thalberg, Mendelssohn
and Hiller. His wide-ranging and sometimes
extravagant piano-writing certainly
had a direct influence on Chopin and
Liszt, and a discernable, if less pronounced,
influence on Saint-Saëns, Moszkowski,
and other pianist/composers of the Late-Romantic
period.
In his orchestral and
choral/orchestral works, Hummel generally
eschews emotional profundity (the man
knew his own strengths and wisely chose
not to poach on Beethoven’s turf), but
his expressive range is greater than
was once supposed. His inventiveness
within that range is sometimes extraordinary.
His two piano concertos,
for instance (the A minor, Op. 85, and
the B minor, Op. 89) were long represented
in the record catalogues by a handful
of dutiful, let’s-get-this-over-with
interpretations by soloists who played
them with all the enthusiasm of a dental
patient waiting for a root-canal. Both
works bristle like barbed wire entanglements
with technical challenges and fiendish
complexities. Just playing through them
at all is a major accomplishment for
any pianist. Fully realizing their worth
as music was beyond the call
of duty.
All the "accepted
wisdom" about Hummel’s concertos
underwent a seismic revision in 1987,
when the formidable Stephen Hough tore
up the pea-patch with them on a Chandos
recording that has earned the status
of a classic. I remember being absolutely
blown-away the first time I heard Hough’s
assault on these works. What earlier
pianists saw as egregious difficulty,
vapid ornamentation and elaborateness-for-it-own
sake, Hough fearlessly transformed into
vivid, thrilling, red-blooded music.
Hummel’s reputation has been in a constant
state of upward-re-evaluation ever since.
The release under consideration
here will only add to our growing appreciation
of Hummel – up to a point. Here we have
three of his more significant choral/orchestral
works in vital, committed performances
that demonstrate his consummate professionalism
while also pointing up the difference
between a very good composer and a truly
great one; in this case, Haydn, whose
influence on the Mass is abundantly
clear.
That’s a good thing,
mostly. While there’s nothing on this
disc that’s so inspired, or inspiring,
as to carve a new groove in your memory,
you’ll probably feel as I do that listening
to them is time well spent.
The major work, of
course, is the substantial Op. 80, the
first of five masses Hummel composed
during his tenure as Konzertmeister
to the court of Prince Esterhazy.
Hummel’s indebtedness to Haydn is openly
and honestly come-by. It was Haydn,
in fact, who recommended Hummel for
the Esterhazy post, and since Haydn’s
last composition for the Esterhazys
was the sublime Harmoniemesse, the
element of continuity is both appropriate
and quite intentional. In a sense, the
Opus 80 Mass was a job application,
and since Hummel knew full well that
Haydn was a hard act to follow, he wisely
solicited, and generously received,
considerable advice from his older colleague.
When the work was premiered, in May,
1804, it was well received; Hummel remained
Konzertmeister for the Esterhazy
court until 1811, and wrote some of
his best music during that period.
Even if one discounts
Hummel’s relative youthfulness (he was
twenty-six when he finished the composition),
the E-flat major Mass is an ingratiating
and impressive work. It may not storm
the heavens or display the highest level
of inspiration, but it contains many
passages of startling originality.
The opening Kyrie
is stately and sonorous; the Gloria
satisfyingly festive; I loved the virile,
braying horns! When we arrive at the
Credo, Hummel deploys one of
his most original touches: a gentle,
rocking, almost lullaby-like opening,
which he gradually transforms by means
of surprising strokes of instrumental
color, soaring vocal lines, and imaginative
harmonic changes, into a major statement.
There’s a meltingly beautiful oboe melody
about 30 seconds into the "Et
incarnatus", followed by a
tenor aria so heartfelt and compelling
that it makes me curious to hear a sample
of Hummel’s operatic work. When Hummel
gets to the "Dona nobis pacem",
he scores against-the-text by means
of assertive bass and rattling drums
– this is not a humble supplication!
As a whole, the E-flat
major Mass doesn’t leave the
same majestic impression as the work
it most closely resembles, Haydn’s Missa
in tempore Belli, but it’s still
a remarkably assured and well-wrought
work, especially for a youngish composer
who knew that comparisons would inevitably
be made between his music and Haydn’s.
Hummel didn’t let that circumstance
intimidate him in the least. This music
rewards repeated hearings, and it certainly
whets the appetite for Hummel’s other
four masses – which we shall hear in
due course, since Chandos is embarking
on an integral set. If you have a special
fondness for choral/orchestral fare,
you’ll find this disc a worthy addition
to your collection. If it is not quite
a neglected "masterpiece",
it’s still a major discovery.
The relatively brief
Te Deum, composed to commemorate
the signing of the Peace of Pressburg,
26 December 1805 – a treaty that, in
effect, paid a large territorial bribe
to Napoleon in exchange for Bonaparte
ordering his troops not to trash Vienna
– was written in only four or five days
and unfortunately sounds that way. "Generic
jubilance" characterizes most of
the piece – I found its relentless bounciness
rather annoying up until 9:35 into the
proceedings, when a brief puff of genuine
inspiration fills the sails and invests
the closing with an exciting burst of
pomp. Considering the deadline pressure
poor Hummel was under, we ought to admire
his skill rather than disparage his
reliance on clichés; and at ten-and-a-half-minutes,
the Te Deum hardly outstays its
welcome.
For this listener,
the shortest composition on this disc
is also the most interesting. Little
is known about the circumstances surrounding
the composition of the Quod in orbe.
It’s a stand-alone "Gradual",
i.e., a musical interlude intended for
performance between the Gloria and
the Credo of an ordinary (non-musical)
Mass, and the program annotator, Mr.
David Wyn Jones, postulates 1806 as
the date of its first and maybe only
performance.
The text Hummel chose
to set (or was commanded to set; we
simply don’t know which), is not one
with which I am familiar (anyone want
to help me out, here?), but it’s such
an odd collage of apocalyptic imagery
that it’s worth quoting in full:
What has been bound
on Earth,
will be loosed in the Citadel of Heaven,
because what the supreme Power loosens
here
will be released in the heights of Heaven
at the
end of the world when You shine in terrifying
power;
Therefore glory be to You and Your Son
forever.
Not exactly the most
mellifluous passage for a musical setting,
and Hummel’s approach is intriguingly
strange, even a little bit weird. He
divides the chorus into four parts,
male voices predominating, and embroiders
the words with a spare, dark, rather
ambiguous orchestral accompaniment.
Given the brevity of the composition,
Hummel manages to work in more than
a few strikingly individual colors and
dynamic shadings. Especially effective
are the two "book-end" passages
for solo timpani at the beginning and
end – decorative, stern, and tensely
restrained rather than overtly dramatic,
these curious little flourishes are
played with exquisite finesse by Charles
Fullbrook, on a set of regimental kettledrums
built in 1870 "by George Potter
of Aldershot".
I presume Mr. Potter’s
name is significant to students of the
percussive arts, because there’s definitely
a distinct and commanding timbre to
the sound of these drums, throughout
the entire disc. This is a real asset,
because Hummel’s timpani parts are often
quite imaginative and in this recording
they register perfectly: clean, distinct,
just penetrating enough to cut through
the surrounding textures or to grab
your attention during a silence.
Richard Hickox conducts
each of these scores with conviction
and a splendid sensitivity to balances
and dynamic gradations. The Collegium
Musicum (38 instrumentalists, performing
on a mixture of authentic period instruments
and modern reproductions thereof, along
with a chorus of 24) has just the right
heft and sonority for this music. Their
playing, and singing, is always alert,
stylish, and ultra-transparent – which
allows us to hear the many felicities
of Hummel’s scoring; yet there’s plenty
of juice in the beefy sections. The
four soloists are well-matched and sound
as though they’re really enjoying the
often-challenging solo lines Hummel
assigns, pretty even-handedly, to each
voice.
Chandos provides superb
sound -- neither over-reverberant nor
obsessively clinical.
William R. Trotter