Bohuslav MARTINŮ (1890-1959)
Concerto for harpsichord and small orchestra (1935) [18.40]*
Chamber music No 1 Les fêtes nocturnes (1959) [20.04]
Les rondes (1930) [15.35]+
La revue de cuisine, complete ballet (ed. Christopher Hogwood) (1927)
[20.42]
Robert Hill (harpsichord);
Holst Sinfonietta/Klaus Simon (piano)+
rec. Schlossbergsaal, SWR Radio, Freiburg, 25-26 October 2009
NAXOS 8.572485 [75.14]
This compilation brings together a number of scores by Martinů from various
stages of his career right up to the final year of his life. It is slightly
odd to find an ensemble based in Freiburg named after the English composer Gustav
Holst - the Holst Singers and the Holst Orchestra are very definitely British
organisations - but I suppose we should regard it with no more surprise than
British ensembles from the Amadeus Quartet onwards adopting their names from
continental composers. It is also somewhat surprising to find that the complete
ballet score of La revue de cuisine, highly successful in its form as
a suite, was reconstructed from a score in the Paul Sacher archives in Basle
by Christopher Hogwood whose reputation largely rests on his work as an early
music specialist. It is gratifying to see musicians ‘cross-pollinating’
in this way. Not that Hogwood is not already steeped in the Martinů idiom
as a conductor: four volumes on Hyperion: review;
review;
review;
review;
one on Arte
Nova and several on Supraphon review
review.
The Harpsichord Concerto, like contemporaneous works by Falla and Martin,
was written with a ‘big’ harpsichord sound in mind, the type of
instrument played by Wanda Landowska in the 1930s, rather than more modern ‘period’
reconstructions. What Robert Hill plays here, however, sounds more like a smaller
baroque instrument which has been brought forward into the recorded balance
and amplified. This enables the instrument to be clearly heard, but the closeness
of the sound does not give the recording much sense of space; the piano which
also features in the score sounds much more naturally balanced. For this concerto
the best performance probably comes from Zuzana Ruzičková on an
old 1969 Supraphon recording where a rather grand-sounding harpsichord is better
matched with the orchestra in a more naturally balanced acoustic; but one does
note that Martinů does specify a “small orchestra” - really
an enlarged chamber ensemble - and the Holst Sinfonietta are probably closer
to the scale he had in mind.
The even smaller-scale Fêtes nocturnes are given a more
natural acoustic in the performance here, and like many of the works Martinů
wrote towards the end of his life they make a charming impression. As the booklet
note observes, these are gentle and atmospheric pieces in which the composer
looks back to the music of his Czech youth, and it is noteworthy as the only
piece of chamber music by Martinů which employs the harp.
For the last two works on this CD we go back to Martinů’s earlier
years when jazz was a strong influence on his music. Les rondes at the
beginning shows a close affinity in style with Stravinsky’s The soldier’s
tale but later Janáček also comes to mind. One is not altogether
surprised to find that Martinů originally entitled the piece Moravian
Dances. The sound of these dances is much more astringent than Janáček's
earlier work of that title; and despite its upbeat surface Les rondes
is not really a very loveable score, with the exception of the meditative Andantino
with its prominent cor anglais solo.
La revue de cuisine, on the other hand, is a real charmer. The plot is
ridiculously silly even by Martinů’s often indiscriminate standards,
but it clearly inspired him and he produced some highly entertaining music.
Hogwood’s reconstruction adds only some five minutes of music which were
not included in the suite, but they are well worth hearing. The one substantial
unfamiliar movement is the Marche funèbre which leaves
one at a loss to decide why Martinů decided to exclude it from his suite;
the whole score fits together like a nicely tailored glove. The performances
both here and in Les rondes are excellent, with just the right sort of
jazzy sleaziness; and the recording acoustic is both clear and atmospheric.
A Supraphon
recording of the complete score conducted by Christopher Hogwood is rather plusher
but the jazz elements are less indulged; some may prefer the more Gershwin-like
overtones of his reading, but the Naxos sound is perhaps more authentically
1920s.
One minor point of accuracy: in his booklet note Klaus Simon states that the
Tango from La revue de cuisine is a “magnificent parody
of Ravel’s Boléro.” It would have been difficult for
Martinů to parody a work that was not produced until a year later. Maybe
it was just something that was in the air at the time.
Three of the same works included on this CD - excluding the Harpsichord Concerto
- are also available on a Kontrapunkt CD from the Danish Chamber Players, but
I have not heard this and in any event La revue de cuisine ballet is
given there not at full length but only in its form as a suite. Otherwise this
Naxos compilation has the field pretty much to itself - there are alternative
versions of all the works here available, but none containing all the pieces.
Well worth exploration.
Paul Corfield Godfrey
Well worth exploration.