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Alexander GLAZUNOV (1865
– 1936) Complete Works for Organ:-
Prelude and Fugue in D Op.93 (1906) [9:14]
Prelude and Fugue in D minor Op.98 (1914) [8:23]
Prelude and Fugue in D minor Op.62 (1899) arr. B. Sabaneev [14:43]
Fantasy in G Op.110 (1934) [16:54]
Vera Zvegintseva (organ)
rec. Notre-Dame du Perpetuel Secours, Paris France 28-30 September
2005
NORTHERN FLOWERS NF/PMA9940 [49:06] [NB]
I do not think I am venturing out on too much of a limb to suggest
that this is a disc for the specialist. The orchestra has always
seemed to be Glazunov’s natural element giving him opportunities
to express his flair for orchestration and instrumental colour.
Prior to listening to this disc I have to say I had no idea he
had written any music for organ let alone a full CD’s worth. That
last statement should be caveated a little; after all this disc
runs to a pretty mean 49:06 of which fourteen minutes is a transcription
– by a third party - for organ of one of Glazunov’s piano preludes
and fugues. A further surprise to me – although common knowledge
I’m sure amongst organ aficionados – is that the main organ of
the Moscow Conservatory was/is a Cavaillé-Coll. For me that name
is synonymous with the Vierne and Widor Organ Symphonies with
great banks of dramatic reeds thundering in religious ecstasy
and certainly not one I would ever associate with Glazunov but
appropriate that this recording should have been made using just
such an instrument.
The three original works here are all late in the arc of Glazunov’s
composing career. Although he was barely forty by 1906 because
of his precociously young debut as a composer the large bulk of
his greatest and most influential works had already been written.
1905 was the year he took over directorship of the St Petersburg
Conservatory and it is clear that his creative energies were diverted
into that institution. Don’t come to these works expecting to
be thrilled by extravagant musical gestures or dramatic keyboard
showpieces. These are sober, indeed sombre works in the style
of Bach or, as the liner points out, Saint-Saëns and Franck. There
is a sense of intellectual rigour and form being placed above
incident or colour that might well appeal to many but I have to
say I find verging on the dull. It is as if Glazunov is working
very hard to suppress his natural instincts for ear-tickling moment
over large scale abstract form. Organist Vera Zvegintseva is well
suited to the role, born and trained in Russia her subsequent
career has taken her to Paris – in just the same way Glazunov
went there after the Revolution – so she has a natural affinity
for the repertoire while understanding the quirks and nature of
the instrument she plays. The recording is good, the warm acoustic
– not overly ‘churchy’ but with an appropriate resonance when
required – allows the detail of the careful contrapuntal writing
to register. It goes with the territory of this type of organ
that the reedy registrations never sound absolutely in tune but
that is as much a function of the instrument’s character as any
fault per se – try the very opening of track 3 for a tremulous
rather watery sound - I’m not enough of an organ expert to recognise
the stop - that is strangely appealing. Zveginstseva is very good
at allowing the structure of the fugues in particular to build
slowly. To be blunt these are far from thrilling works - you cannot
imagine them featuring on too many ‘organ fireworks’ CDs – in
fact Glazunov seems to be deliberately avoiding anything that
could be deemed crowd-pleasing. The 1914 Prelude and Fugue
in D minor is dedicated to Saint-Saëns and it has the feel
of a ‘private’ work – for a year of such global import this work
piece seems spectacularly detached from the real world let alone
musically contemporaneous events. Again and again as Glazunov
seems to be approaching a musical climax/crisis the music sheers
away. I have not seen any scores so I cannot tell how rigorously
Zvegintseva follows the detail contained therein, all I would
say is that for extended passages there is some sense of a ramble
– it is hard to perceive the underlying bar-to-bar pulse and large
structure. But then others might argue with some validity that
this is the nature of ‘pure’ contrapuntal writing. When a sustained
climax is finally reached – track 4 around 5:20 through to the
end of the movement – certainly the organ makes a wonderfully
French sound and Zvegintseva is good at articulating the chords
and passage-work and at last there is the pleasure of hearing
the acoustic echoing away as the work ends.
The third work was not originally conceived for organ although
it sounds well in this transcription in terms of the registrations
used and overall ‘feel’. The only obvious issue is that some of
the internal writing you can imagine being easier to articulate
on a responsive grand piano than an intractable organ. Certainly
there is a degree of lumpiness audible that I would put down to
the instrument not the player. Also, by nature of its origin there
is a greater rate of harmonic turn-over in this work which leads
to a degree of obscuring that was not apparent in the original
organ works. The main difference between the ‘piano’ prelude and
fugue and the other two original works of the same title is one
of form. For the original works Glazunov wrote a fugue roughly
double the length of the introductory prelude. Here the fugue
is nearer to four times the length and the treatment of the fugal
concept is far freer – more of a fantasy in fugal form perhaps.
It has more of a questing feel than the other two works so named
but again there is little opportunity for display – this is a
questioning and cerebral work. The final work is pretty much just
that – Glazunov’s Op.110 written in 1934-5 seems to be the last
work he assigned an opus number just a year before his death.
Has a work more out of its time ever been written? As so often
I do find it remarkable with a man who spent so many years passionately
involved with and actively promoting the music of young aspiring
composers that some of their harmonic or formal daring, let alone
the musical developments in the rest of the world did not rub
off on his own work. By definition if you are working with young
artists you cannot remain totally aloof to new ideas. But back
to the music -it was dedicated to and first performed by Marcel
Dupré who also acted as technical consultant. There is a gently
spiritual quality to the opening Fantasia and judged by
the ear alone it has thrown off most of the strict formal shackles
of the other works. Conversely, it hard to avoid the thought that
this is an old man’s music – the fires of inspiration let alone
passion are burning low. Zvegintseva works hard at injecting as
much variety and colour into the score as it will allow but this
remains for me a rather grey work. Perhaps specialists in this
field will find more subtle pleasures. I see that the three original
works have been recorded elsewhere although not on a French organ
the sound of which is my enduring pleasurable memory of this disc
– the very end of track 8 unleashes the beast within in a final
moment of valedictory splendour. All credit to Northern Flowers
for producing this disc which is by definition going to appeal
to a niche market within a niche. I would like to hear Zvegintseva
in more of the Russian repertoire the liner says she has a particular
affinity for but ultimately I find the music here just too uninspiring
to imagine it leaping from my shelves very often.
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