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Antonín DVOŘÁK
(1841-1904)
1. Biblical songs (1) [16:18]
2. Te Deum Op.103 (2) [20:46]
3. Violin Concerto in A minor Op.53 (3) [34:38]
4. Requiem Op.89 (4) [105:14]
5. Stabat Mater Op.58 (5) [86:12]
Lívia Ághová (2), Lucia Popp (4), Eva Urbanová (5) (sopranos), Eva
Randová (1,4), Katerina Kachlíková (5) (mezzo-sopranos); Josef Protschka
(4), ŝtefan Margita (5) (tenors); Ivan Kusnjer (2) (baritone);
Peter Mikuláŝ (4,5) (bass); Ivan Zenaty (3) (violin)
Prague Symphony Orchestra; Prague Symphonic Chorus (4, 5); Prague
Philharmonic Choir (2); Jiri Belohlávek (1-3), Petr Altrichter (4),
Libor Peŝek (5)
rec. Alte Oper, Frankfurt, Germany, 1993
Region 0
Released separately as 102137, 102143 & 102145.
ARTHAUS MUSIK 107512
[DVDs: 81:00 + 90:00 + 110:00]
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Although recorded in concert as recently as 1993 this 3 DVD
collection of Dvořák's major sacred works is best approached
from the perspective of historical and/or archival document
rather that library recommendation. This is not a comment
on the quality of the music or performances all of which are
at least good and some superb. The reason for the historical
value is the performers. We have three of the (then) younger
generation of Czech conductors conducting the fine and characterful
pre-velvet revolution Prague Symphony Orchestra and associated
choruses. In 1993 this meant that the orchestra still retained
a distinctive Czech sound with rich strings, wonderfully characterful
woodwind (I'm thinking especially here of the plangent oboe
and perky clarinet) and incisive brass tempered by mellow horns.
Add pretty much a who's-who of the finest Czech soloists of
the day - including with enormous poignancy the irreplaceable
Lucia Popp singing in the Requiem who died the same year
these recordings were made - and you must wonder why I advise
the archival status. The problem is these are video performances
and therefore the visual element must contribute. Sadly, this
is some of the dullest least inspiring videoing of a concert
I have ever watched. If you ever wanted to put someone of classical
music in concert show them this DVD - everything is so sombre
and dour. Even the opening titles are extraordinarily dull -
literally piece titles on a black background - it feels more
like a wake than a concert. Camera angles and chosen close-ups
are predictable and routine. The picture quality is average
for early 90's TV broadcast lacking any kind of the clarity
the best recordings now boast. This is further reflected in
the 4:3 picture ratio - standard for the time but one that takes
no account of the preponderance of wide-screen televisions today.
Most damaging of all the sound is of similar broadcast quality
running into problems of congestion and distortion at the big
climaxes. Much of the time the sound is actually rather rich
and warm but with that haze of distortion clouding the upper
frequencies in loud passages - it rather reminds me of overloaded
analogue cassette tape recordings. In silent pauses there is
audible background noise that goes beyond hall ambience. And
this is such a shame because much of the music-making is so
fine.
To take the discs in numerical order; the first concert is under
the direction of Jiri Belohlávek some years before he took over
as the BBC Symphony Orchestra's principal conductor. His conducting
is a model of calm control without any of the hyperactive showboating
which is becoming more popular amongst conductor's today. The
programme opens with the five Biblical Songs Op.99 that
Dvořák orchestrated from the original set of ten. The solo
part is taken with dignified authority by Eva Randová. I absolutely
adore the kind of rich dark tone she produces - some might feel
it is a rather statuesque performance lacking the humanity that
some find in this work but to my ear it is a compellingly concentrated
interpretation. Another major black mark to Arthaus here; the
box says there are subtitles - well I pressed every combination
of buttons on my remote in every menu and no subtitles appear.
Ironically the booklets for each of the DVDs is better than
it often is - including a reasonable essay in English German
and French and artist biographies.... but again NO texts. Even
the individual songs are untitled on screen. I do understand
that you do not always want subtitles or extra-musical information
of any kind but to exploit the potential of DVD surely they
should be there as an option. The Te Deum Op.103 is the
most occasional of all the works in this set. Composed as a
temporary replacement for his cantata The American Flag (the
text was not yet complete) this was written to celebrate the
400th anniversary of the discovery of America by Columbus. It
is the kind of piece that choral societies roll out with gratitude
because it is a relatively easy sing, at barely twenty minutes
it does not outstay its welcome, and it requires just two soloists.
Having written so negatively about the piece it is a pleasure
to report it receives a thrillingly virile and impressive performance
here. Gosh, the Prague Philharmonic Choir sing well. The blend
across all the voices is superbly achieved and there is power
and focus is all departments. Likewise the actual sound of the
two soloists in their relatively brief contributions is absolutely
ideal. Soprano Lívia Ághová has that silvery Popp-like brilliance
to her voice - that's a big compliment from where I sit - and
baritone Ivan Kusnjer balances weighty tone in the lower register
with an appealing freedom in alt. Although this will never be
one of my favourite pieces this is as impressive a performance
as I have heard.
Which takes me to the work which the DVD cover describes as
a 'bonus' - the relatively early Violin Concerto in A minor
Op.53. People always mutter about "formal problems"
with this work and certainly its position in the concerto pantheon
has never been that high and within the composer's own canon
it sits firmly in the shadow of the great Cello Concerto.
But here we are treated to a simply stunning performance - easily
the best I have ever heard. The soloist is Ivan Zenaty. His
is a far from familiar name although in the last few years his
disc of the Foerster
concertos also with Belohlávek and a sonatas
disc on Supraphon I enjoyed hugely proves he has had a long
and distinguished career. His biography cites Milstein and Gertler
as formative influences and indeed his playing does have the
bravura intensity of both those remarkable players. What he
brings out in this concerto is the dancing folk-element - I
heard echoes of the Slavonic Dances quite clearly here which
had quite passed me by before. The DVD shows Zenaty to be a
wonderfully unfussy player too - he really does just stand and
play. Yes I know what the academics mean about the structure
of this work but surely at this stage of his career Dvořák
was striving to give his music a national identity within the
structure of traditional/classical musical form and as played
here I'm convinced it works. Luckily the recording does not
struggle to accommodate the dynamic range of the orchestra and
instrumental soloist alone as much as it does with full chorus
and singers so technically this is the best of the performances
on the disc too.
The second DVD is devoted to the Requiem Op.89. Again
this is work that has rather suffered in comparison beit to
the same composer's Stabat Mater or other 19th Century
Requiems by Brahms or of course Verdi. But context is everything;
the work was Dvořák's third (lucrative) commission for
the major British organisations - in this instance the 1891
Birmingham festival - and he was never intellectually or emotionally
trying to write a work with the overt theatricality of the Verdi
or the rigour of Brahms. Again, I am grateful to this performance
to remind me what a fine work this is in its own right. The
baton has passed to Petr Altrichter and he proves to be just
as insightful and in control as Belohlávek. He 'works' his orchestra
and chorus with more overt energy but that is consistent with
the scale of the piece. Interestingly the four soloists are
ranged behind the orchestra but in front of the chorus and in
turn the chorus is split all the ladies to the left and the
gentlemen to the right. Not that either detail of the staging
would you know from listening alone since the soloists occupy
a traditional 'front centre' position and the chorus are integrated
into a single group. Technically this is a better recording
and praise be there are subtitles at hand. As mentioned before
the particular poignant delight is the presence of Lucia Popp
as soprano soloist. I have heard her sing with more sheer tonal
beauty but still she is in fine voice. In the 2nd movement Graduale
you can appreciate the skill of the composer's lightly scored
accompaniment and the exceptionally well-drilled ladies of the
Prague Symphonic Choir who negotiate some tricky counterpoint
with commendable ease. One of the early digital successes for
Supraphon were recordings on CD with the Czech Philharmonic
conducted by Wolfgang Sawallisch and an international line-up
of soloists of the two big sacred works. As a performance this
matches up to those very well and if anything benefits from
the extra intensity of live performance. Whilst on the topic
of this being live I should mention that generally throughout
the three discs the Frankfurt audience are reasonably well behaved
although there is the inevitable bronchial moment and generally
the microphones pick up quite a lot of auditorium noise. Personally,
I never find this to be distracting given the concert hall location
but there is enough of it audible to annoy those more sensitive
to such things than I. Similarly, from a playing point of view
there are passing moments - and they really are just moments
- of ragged ensemble but nothing that detracts from my pleasure
or admiration of the quality of these Czech players. Indeed
just the reverse - I would say the orchestra have gone up in
my estimation. I am fascinated by the discrepancy between the
weight of sound the strings seem able to produce and how little
effort they seem to make to produce that power. Part of the
interest in a sequence of performances such as this is to see
and hear how the performers mould themselves to the demands
of the different works. A case in point is Eva Randová who adds
an operatic power to her singing here that was (appropriately)
missing from the Biblical songs. Indeed this is a very
sensitive quartet of soloists whose voices and musical temperaments
are perfectly in tune with the music. As mentioned before this
is not as theatrical a work as the Verdi Requiem but
that is not to say it lacks thrilling moments - the climax of
the Tuba Mirum [chapter 5] is a hairs-on-the-back-of
your-neck moment and if you risk some distortion by turning
this passage up a little higher than normal the conviction and
power of this performance blazes through - including the extraordinary
touch in the scoring of using sleigh-bells to point the climax.
As mentioned, Altrichter ‘physicalises’ much more than Belohlávek
but I rather enjoy seeing that level of commitment from the
podium. Listeners coming new to the work hoping for the great
streams of memorably Bohemian melodic flow that mark out Dvořák's
mature symphonies will be disappointed but instead there is
a remarkably concentrated musical argument that is superbly
constructed to guide you to the spiritual meaning of the mass
proper. Much as I love the Verdi I occasionally forget it is
first and foremost a Requiem, something that does not happen
here. That impression is aided here time and again by the superbly
controlled expressive singing of the chorus. I was particularly
impressed by their dynamic range and even tonal warmth across
the entire range of both dynamic and pitch. Listen to their
beautifully graded Amens at the close of the Lacrimosa
[chapter 9] or the sheer exultant energy in the fugal passages
of the Offertorium or Hostias movements to
know that this is a very fine choir indeed. As an aside - these
choruses have a Handelian contrapuntal pomp that made me wonder
how much Dvořák was shamelessly appealing to his English
Victorian middle-class audience! Dvořák's ear for instrumental
colour is everywhere in evidence - the prominent parts for the
bass clarinet and cor anglais adding a sombre darkness to many
of the more reflective passages. The recording gives them a
rather synthetic prominence but it is a delight to hear them
played so characterfully. It is typical of these recordings
that solo instrumental lines are unduly spotlit. It diminishes
any concert-hall illusion and does give the stereo sound-stage
a rather flat left to right split with no real impression of
front to back depth. A mention here too for the two male soloists;
tenor Josef Protschka and bass Peter Mikuláŝ. Protschka
has just the right edge of steel in his voice while Mikuláŝ
possesses the kind of resonant bass that countries in the old
Eastern bloc seemed able to produce at the drop of a hat. One
of the fascinating aspects of Dvořák's compositional choices
is that he uses his soloists far more often a kind of semi-chorus,
yes of course there are solo lines and passages but the solos/duets
are far less defined than in other settings - he does not choose
to highlight the individual over the group - this is a collective
act of worship and remembrance. It is worth remembering what
a big work this is too - longer (the performance here
runs to just shy of 110 minutes) by some distance than the nominally
big Requiems of Verdi or Brahms. Great credit therefore to Petr
Altrichter and all the performers that they not only sustain
their concentration throughout but also create a sense of cumulative
prayerful intensity that leads inexorably to the final Agnus
Dei [chapter 14] which happens also to be the single longest
movement in the work. This movement is a movingly sombre work
- with the steady tread of a heavy-hearted if not funereal march.
The ladies of the choir provide an occasional shaft of light
with Popp leading the great cries of 'Lux Aeterna' which is
the last great outburst in the work from that point gently receding
into a hushed eternity. Quite possibly this is the least appreciated
of Dvořák's true masterpieces and the performance here
certainly does it great justice. The applause of the Frankfurt
audience is extended but rarely rises above the dutiful with
plenty of the public - this always infuriates me - hurrying
away after the most cursory of claps.
The third disc contains the more overtly populist Stabat
Mater under the baton of Libor Peŝek. At the time of
this recording he was the best known internationally of the
three conductors in that he was in the middle of his stint as
principal conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra
- indeed he was followed in that post in 1997 by Altrichter.
The well written liner booklet makes the point that this relatively
early work - 1877 when the composer was just twenty six was
the piece that launched his international career. A performance
at London's Royal Albert Hall in 1883 created a sensation. Interestingly
it was not written as a commission but instead sprang from the
appalling multiple tragedies of losing three of his children
early in their lives. Dvořák's genius was to turn such
dark despair into a work of art which centred on the grieving
mother of Christ at the foot of the cross. Although the words
of the Stabat Mater had been set many composers previously this
was the biggest and most overtly dramatic setting to date. This
is clear from the gathering clouds of the opening very extended
movement Stabat Mater dolorosa. Peŝek brings his soloists
back to a more traditional position beside the conductor's podium
with the ladies to the left and the men to the right. Peŝek
himself conducts in a sternly sombre fashion with a complete
absence of histrionics. The presentation of the disc is identical
to the other two - starkly minimal titles, mediocre quality
visuals and adequate but far from demonstration quality sound.
The sub-title option does work on this disc. Curiously the choir
here do not sound quite as tightly disciplined as in the Requiem
and again the recording struggles to cope with them singing
at full volume and much inner orchestral detail is lost along
the way. Peŝek prefers a rather plain approach which while
avoiding the danger of sentimentalising the work does rather
underplay the inherent drama of it too. Of the soloists only
the bass Peter Mikuláŝ is the same as in the Requiem.
Tenor ŝtefan Margita makes an immediate and positive impression
with an appealingly free Italianate ring to his tone. Likewise
soprano Eva Urbanová sings her exposed first entry with beautiful
poise and refined control. Mezzo-soprano Katerina Kachlíková
is the least appealing of all the soloists on display here anticipating
the ends of phrases and unsettling the ensemble. In comparison
to the imposing Randová she seems rather lightweight. The writer
of the liner notes makes the very valid point that the entire
piece is in effect a sequence of meditations on the passion
of Christ ending with an ecstatic vision of the resurrection.
There is a danger therefore of a degree of sameness through
the bulk of the work. I am not sure Peŝek quite manages
to avoid this trap well though his forces perform for him. This
is because he chooses to maintain steady basic pulses throughout
each movement avoiding impulsive extremes. Its a deliberately
anti-dramatic choice that the rather bronchial audience and
less than atmospheric recording rather undermines with any atmosphere
he creates shattered by an injudicious cough or technical blip.
Peŝek 's conducting style is relatively detached too and
whenever the cameras catch him he is a picture of unemotional
calculation. Which makes the ensemble slips all the more surprising.
All I can imagine is that there was less time to prepare or
the orchestra were not as engaged by the conductor as on the
other DVDs. Certainly part of the fascination of this set is
exactly those kind of comparisons. As a performance regardless
of the medium I would not put this interpretation ahead of the
aforementioned Sawallisch or, perhaps more surprisingly, the
rather fine and fervent version from the Slovak Philharmonic
Orchestra and Chorus under Zdenek Koŝler that turns up
in various guises on Brilliant Classics. Of course there are
highlights - the soprano/tenor duet Fac, ut portem Christi mortem
sounds radiantly beautiful in the hands of such fine singers
as here and Peŝek allows the tempo to flow effectively.
In such company the following Inflammatus et accensus sung by
Katerina Kachlíková disappoints. She keeps her head so resolutely
in the score that communication with the audience is minimised
- she fails to 'sell' the music at all. Worse still, she does
not have the range for the lowest notes of her part and they
all but disappear. Certainly she sounds over-parted, too cautious
both musically and emotionally to carry the role, I did wonder
if she was a late substitute in the role such is her ill-ease.
Collectors familiar with the Fedoseyev/Moscow Radio Symphony
Tchaikovsky cycle also from the Alte Oper will know what to
expect here technically and visually. Personally I find these
Dvořák performances to be infinitely more involving than
those rather routine and efficient Tchaikovsky discs. These
discs can be bought separately - I am not sure if there is a
price benefit from buying them together. The stand-out performances
are the Violin Concerto and the Requiem - both are excellent.
The rest of the disc 1 is of a lower order musically but receives
fine performances. Only the Stabat Mater disappoints by not
being as thrilling as I had expected it to be simply because
Peŝek is not at his visionary best. Because of the technical
shortcomings of these DVDs at the full price they are offered
for I find it hard to recommend this set very highly. Certainly,
do not buy it to test out your new HD 50 inch television and
surround sound system, but do consider it if you want to witness
much music-making of the highest order from - in effect - a
different era. As often happens when watching or listening to
a sequence of recordings the ear and eye accommodates shortcomings
that initially infuriate. So it was with this set; the glory
of the music allied to the brilliance of some of the performances
resulting in an uplifting experience reinforcing once again
the genius of this most humane of composers.
Nick Barnard
See also reviews by Leslie
Wright (102137) and Colin
Clarke (102143).
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