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Waldbühne 2011: Fellini, Jazz &
Co
Dmitri SHOSTAKOVICH (1906-1975)
Jazz Suite No. 2, Op. 50b (1938) [26:20]
Encore:Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk - Suite, Op. 29a (1930-1932)
III. Allegretto [2:46]
Nino ROTA (1911-1979)
La Strada - Suite (1954) [24:05]
Ottorino RESPIGHI (1879-1936)
Fontane di Roma (Fountains of Rome), P. 106 (1915-1916) [17:17]
Pini di Roma (Pines of Rome), P. 141 (1923-1924) [24:07]
Encore:Belkis, Queen of Sheba - Suite, P. 177 (1930)
II. Danza guerresca(War Dance) [3:31]
Paul LINCKE (1866-1946)
Berliner Luft (1922) [4:35]
Berliner Philharmoniker/Riccardo Chailly
rec. live, Waldbühne, Berlin, 23 August 2011
Picture: 16:9, 1080i Full-HD
Sound: PCM stereo, dts-HD Master Audio 5.1
Region: 0 (worldwide)
Video director: Henning Kasten
EUROARTS 2058404
[105:00]
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As outdoor venues go, Berlin’s Waldbühne is one of
the most spectacular. Based on the amphitheatre at the ancient
Greek city of Epidaurus and now home to the Berliner Philharmoniker’s
summer concerts, it seats 22,000 people in a pleasant forest
setting, the stage topped by a distinctive, twin-peaked roof-cum-acoustic-shell.
Many of the orchestra’s themed evenings are available
on DVD - they tend to surface on various arts channels as well
- the ‘American Night’, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle,
one of the most memorable of recent years. Now it’s the
turn of Riccardo Chailly, whose live Mahler 2 from the 2011
Leipzig Mahlerfest impressed me so (review).
The slightly cumbersome title of this disc - Fellini, Jazz
& Co - isn’t all that accurate. Shostakovich’s
Jazz Suites, culled from his other works for stage and
screen, aren’t particularly jazzy; that said, they’re
terrific showpieces, as is the suite from Lady Macbeth of
Mtsensk. The Fellini connection is more obvious, his 1954
film La Strada blessed with a fine score by Nino Rota.
The ‘& Co’ part encompasses two-thirds of Respighi’s
colourful Roman trilogy and a dance from his last ballet, Belkis,
Regina di Saba. The fizzy coda is provided by Paul Lincke’s
Berliner Luft, from his operetta Frau Luna; it’s
to Berliners what the Radetzky March is to the Viennese,
right down to the audience participation.
For some reason Chailly has yet to record any of the Shostakovich
symphonies, but he has given us the piano concertos and lots
of lesser-known scores. In particular I quite enjoyed The
Dance Album (Decca), although his emphasis on cool sophistication
does rob the music of its raw heat and energy. And so it proves
here, genial rhythms and the orchestra’s oh-so-svelte
delivery better suited to the Strausses than to Shostakovich.
Balances are inconsistent too; the piano, squeezebox and saxophones
are easily heard, but the xylophone is very indistinct, especially
in the perky Little Polka. The soft-edged, somewhat diffuse
sound - in stereo at least - isn’t terribly involving
either.
Regrettably, it doesn’t get any better, with a bland rendition
of Rota’s La Strada that lacks energy and direction.
There are fine violin and trumpet solos and Chailly does up
the ante - and the tempo - in that jazzy middle section, muted
trumpets, drums and hi-hats to the fore; otherwise it’s
too much like a unruffled, air-conditioned ride in an expensive
Mercedes, devoid of the character and edge that so enlivens
Riccardo Muti’s fine CD version for Sony. Goodness, less
idiomatic readings of this and the Shostakovich it would be
hard to imagine!
So, how does the Respighi fare? Not very well, is the short
answer. These four Roman fountains are very different and that’s
reflected in the scoring; yet such are the turgid tempi and
lack of sparkle that you’d be hard-pressed to tell one
from the other. Poor balance is even more of an issue here,
the piano and bells of the Villa Medici fountain all but inaudible;
inexplicably, the stereo layer is veiled, gaining a little in
oomph and bite if one selects the surround option - mixed down
to stereo on my Sony player. A desperately prosaic performance
in every respect, I’m afraid.
This doesn’t augur well for the Pines of Rome,
which demands plenty of momentum, colour and attack, all qualities
I’ve not heard thus far. The whooping woodwind of the
Villa Borghese aren’t as crisp and animated as usual,
the sombre bass of the Catacombs much too light to make a lasting
impact. Dynamically the supposedly high-res recording is nowhere
near as expansive or frisson-inducing as it should be,
especially in the slow-building climax to this movement; and
Chailly’s somnolent reading doesn’t help. The Pines
of the Janiculum fares little better - the piano is audible
though - and Chailly gives the legionnaires’ Appian march
a Mahlerian lilt and sway that’s frankly bizarre. Not
surprisingly, that huge finale counts for precious little here.
Not even the spirited cncores - Lady Macbeth, Belkis
and the bierkeller rowdiness of Berliner Luft
- can save this wasted evening, those stilted shots of doe-eyed
lovers and earnest families smiling fixedly at the distant stage
an apt visual metaphor for this concert as a whole.
Soporific performances and dull sonics; in other words, a dud.
Dan Morgan
http://twitter.com/mahlerei
Masterwork Index: Roman
trilogy
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