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Pyotr
Il’yich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) Ballet Suites (Transcriptions for Four Hands) The Sleeping Beauty Suite, Op. 66a (1889) (arr.
Sergei Rachmaninov)
I. Introduction - The Lilac Fairy [4:43];
II. Adagio - Pas d'action [5:30];
III. Characteristic Dance [2:11];
IV. Panorama [3:33];
V. Waltz [3:58] Swan Lake Suite, Op. 20a (1876) (arr. Edouard Langer)
I. Scene [2:48];
II. Waltz [6:25];
III. Dance of the Swans [1:36];
IV. Scene [5:17];
V. Hungarian Dance, ‘Csardas’ [2:14];
VI. Scene [4:23] The Nutcracker Suite, Op. 71a (1892) (arr. Stepan
Esipoff)
I. Overture [3:10];
II. March [2:18];
III. Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy [2:00];
IV. Russian Dance, ‘Trepak’ [1:09];
V. Arab Dance [2:58];
VI. Chinese Dance [1:04];
VII. Dance of the Reed Flutes [2:16];
VIII. Waltz of the Flowers [5:39]
Aurora
Duo – Julia Severus and Alina Luschtschizkaja (piano)
rec. January 2007, Piano School, Berlin-Mitte, Germany NAXOS
8.570418 [63:12]
Think
transcriptions and Liszt springs to mind, but the ubiquity
of pianos in 19th- century parlours meant there
was plenty of demand for reductions/transcriptions, usually
of variable quality. On this all-Tchaikovsky disc we have
fairly substantial arrangements by three different arrangers.
The real challenge is to bring the composer’s magical ballet
scores to life in another medium, a very tall order indeed.
In
1892 Tchaikovsky enlisted the help of the 18-year-old Rachmaninov
to produce a piano version of the suite from The Sleeping
Beauty (1889). After tweaking the score with the help
of Alexander Ziloti (1863-1945) the composer pronounced himself
well pleased with the result. And fearful that Swan Lake (1877)
would ‘sink into oblivion’ Tchaikovsky commissioning a piano
transcription of the suite from his friend and colleague
at the Moscow Conservatory, Edouard Langer (1835-1908). Stepan
Esipoff, who arranged The Nutcracker (1892), is something
of an enigma, though. The liner-notes reveal nothing about
him and even a quick Google proved fruitless.
The
Sleeping Beauty transcription
has the composer’s imprimatur so it’s no surprise it’s
far and away the most successful of the three. Such is
its transporting charm that it’s easy to picture the work
unfolding on the stage. In particular the dance rhythms
of ‘Puss in Boots’ and ‘The White Cat’ (track 3) and the
concluding Waltz (track 5) are winningly phrased. But,
and it’s a big but, the piano sounds a little out of tune
at times, which rather blunted my enjoyment of the piece.
The duo aren’t helped by the fact they are recorded in
an airless acoustic, the piano inclined to hardness in
the big climaxes
Despite
these burdens Swan Lake opens with a gentle ripple
and shimmer, although the phrasing strikes me as somewhat
choppy. And the overpowering Rothbart motif would be even
more effective if it weren’t for the glassy piano sound.
But it’s not just the recording that is disappointing, it’s
the generally prosaic playing as well. Yes, there are the
occasional flashes of eloquence or brilliance – the harp-like
figures (track 9) and the Hungarian Dance (track 10) – but
on the whole the music remains resolutely earthbound. And
in the ’Dance of the Swans’ (track 8) the staccato bass notes
draw attention to the tuning problem I mentioned earlier.
Most unfortunate.
The
fierce climax of this Swan Lake had me reaching for
my much-played Lanchbery/Philharmonia recording to restore
my faith in this lovely score. Of course it goes without
saying that reductions/transcriptions can only be an approximation
of the orchestral original – a point forcibly made in a disc
of Rimsky-Korsakov pieces I reviewed recently – but here
the playing, the recording and the piano sound all conspire
to rob the music of all its charm and seamless elegance.
Arguably
Tchaikovsky’s last ballet, The Nutcracker (1892),
has some of his most enduring tunes; indeed, it’s the one
ballet of his I listen to more than any other. Given what
I’d heard so far I was rather dreading this performance,
which gets off to a very brisk start. Severus and Luschtschizkaja
do manage to catch some of the overture’s Christmas glitter,
even though they race through it. By contrast the ‘Dance
of the Sugar Plum Fairy’ (track 14) is better paced. That
said, the phrasing still strikes me as somewhat awkward at
times.
While
we’re still in the debit column there’s no denying the Esipoff
transcription is the weakest here, although he does evoke
an air of oriental mystery in the ‘Arabian Dance’ (track
16). For their part the duo play with rare fluidity here,
while in the ‘Chinese Dance’ (track 17) there is little sign
of the delicate, mincing gait one remembers from the orchestral
score.
And
that really is the nub of it; these performances are too
often devoid of subtlety in terms of rhythm, colour and dynamics,
so it’s all apt to sound monochromatic. Even the concluding ‘Waltz
of the Flowers’ (track 19) doesn’t bloom with its customary
ease, ending in a bright, hard-driven climax that burns off
the last wisps of magic from this score.
Musically
the performances are too uneven and sonically the recording
is too aggressive. In fact this disc is everything Tchaikovsky’s
great scores aren’t. The basic liner-notes by Julia Severus
are barely adequate, with very little information of real
interest. Normally I try to find some redeeming features
in a review disc but this time there are absolutely none.
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