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          | Kent Nagano’s Beethoven Series from 
            Montréal: The Story So Far  | 
         
         
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            Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
               
              Ideals of the French Revolution  
              The General (realised by Paul Griffiths) [54:55]  
              Symphony No. 5 [34:07]  
              Egmont (excerpts) [12:29]  
              Opferlied [5:35]  
                
              Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal/Kent Nagano  
              rec. Studio MMR, McGill University and Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, 
              Montréal, September 2007 – March 2008  
                
              RCA RED SEAL 88697400842 [54:55 + 52:11]    | 
         
         
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             Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
               
              Gods, Heroes and Men  
              The Creatures of Prometheus (excerpts) [26:19]  
              Symphony No. 3, Eroica [48:03]  
              Additional data tracks featuring narrations by Yann Martel on the 
              theme of Prometheus [12:00, accessible via computer]  
                
              Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal/Kent Nagano  
              rec. Studio MMR, McGill University and Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, 
              Montréal (unspecified date)  
                
              SONY CLASSICAL 88697857372 [74:23]    | 
         
         
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            Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
               
              In the Breath of Time  
              Symphony No. 6, Pastoral [41:12]  
              Symphony No. 8 [24:02]  
              Grosse Fuge (orchestral version) [17:05]  
              Declaration of Interdependence (David Suzuki) [3:27]  
                
              Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal/Kent Nagano  
              rec. Studio MMR, McGill University and Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, 
              Montréal, April-May 2011  
                
              SONY CLASSICAL 88697923602 [41:08 + 49:19]    | 
         
         
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                  My first encounter with the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal 
                  (OSM) came at this year’s Edinburgh International Festival where 
                  they played an outstanding 
                  concert which featured Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony. 
                  The strength of Nagano’s direction and the sheer warmth of the 
                  string sound inspired me to explore their recent Beethoven series 
                  on record and, as good timing would have it, their newest recording, 
                  featuring the Pastoral, had just been released. Listening 
                  to all these CDs close together gives a good impression of how 
                  Nagano’s Beethoven has developed: comparing the 2007 recordings 
                  with those of 2011, you can see that Nagano’s view of Beethoven 
                  has evolved and matured, as he seems more at home in In the 
                  Breath of Time than he did in Ideals of the French Revolution. 
                  A few niggles still persist, though.  
                     
                  There are umpteen recordings of the Beethoven symphonies out 
                  there, so any new versions have to have something distinctive 
                  about them to stand out amongst the competition. Nagano’s strategy 
                  is in some fairly innovative programming. Each disc is organised 
                  around a theme, as you can see from their titles. In some cases 
                  these are obvious, such as linking the Eroica with The 
                  Creatures of Prometheus - outsized heroism an obvious connection, 
                  as well as the fact that the Eroica finale is based on 
                  a theme from Prometheus - sometimes, however, the link 
                  is a little more obscure, such as joining the Sixth and 
                  Eighth with the Grosse Fuge.  
                     
                  The most eccentric link and, I suspect, the one that will divide 
                  listeners the most, is on the Ideals of the French Revolution 
                  disc. Musicologist and writer Paul Griffiths has taken a 
                  received – if not universally approved of – view of the Fifth 
                  Symphony as “a paean to Revolutionary hope” and used this as 
                  an opportunity to explore some of Beethoven’s other “Revolutionary” 
                  music. The subject matter of Goethe’s Egmont could pass 
                  as an example of this, and the excerpts from Beethoven’s incidental 
                  music to the play are done well, including a noble solo from 
                  Canadian soprano Adrianne Pieczonka. More controversial, however, 
                  is Griffiths’ main contribution. In The General he has 
                  taken a selection of music from Egmont and excerpts from 
                  other obscure Beethoven works, such as the music for König 
                  Stephan, the little known Opferlied and the even 
                  less well known music for Duncker’s play, Leonore Prohaska. 
                  His linking framework for these movements is a text from the 
                  memoirs of Roméo Dallaire, head of the UN Peacekeeping mission 
                  in Rwanda before the genocide, who could see the catastrophe 
                  approaching but was refused the means to prevent it. The excerpts 
                  from Dallaire’s writings are read by an actor and the specific 
                  references removed as an attempt to universalise their message. 
                  The Beethoven excerpts are then used as attempts to comment 
                  on the situations and ideas expressed in the words. The sung 
                  excerpts are also given new English words that seem to have 
                  only a tangential link to the original German. Griffiths is 
                  effectively trying to create a new work out of these elements, 
                  and we should be grateful to him for trying to bring to closer 
                  attention some very good but very neglected music in Beethoven’s 
                  canon. The extracts are also well played by the orchestra, and 
                  Nagano whips up exciting energy for the Egmont overture. 
                  Too often, however, the arrangements seem rather random to my 
                  ears or, at their worst, Griffiths resorts to the lamest form 
                  of musical association with words. The fourth Egmont 
                  Entr’acte, for example, sounds like a cry of pain after Dallaire 
                  is told by HQ that he is to do nothing, and this then becomes 
                  a Pastoral interlude as he takes a drive in the country. It’s 
                  a bit too hackneyed to bear repeated listening, and the music 
                  and words don’t shed any light on one another. However, it’s 
                  good to spotlight some music that is seldom heard, even though 
                  the fundamental basis of the project seems, to my ears, a little 
                  misguided.  
                     
                  The Grosse Fuge, performance is more successful, even 
                  though the link with the surrounding symphonies is poorly justified: 
                  there are times when it moves with granite-like force, and other 
                  moments of delicacy, particularly in the central section, when 
                  it’s easier to remember that this was originally written for 
                  a string quartet. The Prometheus music, also, is probably 
                  the most successful of all the “extras”: the overture gallops 
                  along at a cracking pace and Nagano’s ear for tempi means that 
                  you never forget that this is ballet music. However, 
                  both these discs finish with some unnecessarily portentous, 
                  almost self-conscious non-musical narratives: Martel’s commentary 
                  on Prometheus is preachy without any great consequence, 
                  while Suzuki’s Declaration of Interdependence just sounds 
                  odd, especially in this context, addressing as it does the need 
                  of all peoples and beings to get along with one another. I guess 
                  you could just about argue a link if you tried hard enough, 
                  and goodness knows Nagano certainly tries hard in his booklet 
                  essays, but no-one is going to buy a CD of Beethoven symphonies 
                  based on these.  
                     
                  So what of the symphonies themselves? Each performance is good, 
                  if not world-beating, and it’s definitely a sense of improving 
                  with time. The earliest performance, the Fifth from 2008, 
                  is solid and dependable, without being exceptional. As I noticed 
                  when I heard them in Edinburgh, Nagano’s approach to Beethoven 
                  is unashamedly old school: he goes for muscular sound and, often, 
                  broad tempi, and you are never in any doubt that you are listening 
                  to a symphony orchestra. It’s an approach I broadly like, 
                  though it’s not distinctive enough in the Fifth. Nagano 
                  does, however, use the edition of the text that includes the 
                  repeat of the whole Scherzo and Trio in the third movement, 
                  something which, to my ears, unbalances the movement, but that’s 
                  a matter of taste. His finale is the most successful, with a 
                  real sense of momentum and drive that is at its most thrilling 
                  at the start of the exposition repeat, where Nagano pulls out 
                  an extra stop that we didn’t know he had.  
                     
                  Most of the Eroica is well done, but the first movement 
                  is a problem. Here Nagano seems to fall into the worst of the 
                  old school habits, partly with his choice of pacing but, more 
                  seriously, with the way he controls the unfolding of Beethoven’s 
                  symphonic argument. His first movement doesn’t quite drag, but 
                  it’s noticeably slower than more recent interpreters such as 
                  Mackerras, Harnoncourt, or even Rattle. I suspect, however, 
                  that it feels a lot slower than it really is because 
                  Nagano seems to lack a real sense of impetus or forward momentum. 
                  Karajan in 1962 is comparable as, in fact, is Vänskä’s 
                  recent Minnesota disc, but both of those conductors have a more 
                  secure sense of where this music is going, whereas Nagano seems 
                  to be following it rather than directing it. When the coda came 
                  there was no sense of elation or of a goal achieved: the music 
                  just seemed to come to a stop. The other movements are finer, 
                  with a large-scale, brooding Funeral March, a filigree Scherzo 
                  and an impressive finale, which is far more satisfying than 
                  its opening counterpart, but many listeners will be put off 
                  by a lacklustre first movement, especially when there are so 
                  many other performances that do the job much better.  
                     
                  The most recent disc, In the Breath of Time, is for me 
                  the most successful. The performance of the Eighth unites 
                  the best of the old and the best of the new; a large-scale performance 
                  which takes its time but doesn’t wallow and enjoys the swagger 
                  of the Menuet as well as the humour of the finale. Maybe 
                  it’s because I heard them play it so well in the Usher Hall, 
                  but I found their reading of the Pastoral to be the most 
                  enjoyable of all, a rich, effusive sound, crowned by string 
                  tone that you could take a warm bath in. If there are times 
                  when Nagano wallows a little then this doesn’t get in the way 
                  of a broader sense of structure that leavens the texture for, 
                  say, the bird calls of the second movement or the skirling dance 
                  of the peasant gathering. This is a hugely enjoyable performance 
                  and, together with the Grosse Fuge (though not the Declaration 
                  of Interdependence!) this is, for my money, the most successful 
                  disc in the series so far.  
                     
                  I’m not sure whether this team are planning a complete cycle, 
                  but I’ll certainly keep my eyes open for future instalments. 
                  In spite of my misgivings, there are a lot of good things on 
                  display on these discs and, even if you don’t fully buy into 
                  the extras, Nagano’s attempt to make us look at Beethoven through 
                  new eyes is a laudable one. Above all, these discs confirm the 
                  strength of the Montrealers as an orchestral team, with beautiful 
                  playing and always top notch recording from the Sony/BMG engineers. 
                   
                     
                  Simon Thompson  
                     
                   
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
               
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