Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64 (1888) [44.59]
Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901)
La forza del destino: Overture (1869) [8:02]
Jean SIBELIUS (1865-1957)
Kuolema: Valse triste, Op. 44 (1903) [5:15]
West-Eastern Divan Orchestra/Daniel Barenboim
rec. in concert, Victoria Hall, Geneva, August 2004
WARNER CLASSICS 2564 621905 [58:35]
The West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, brings together young-adult musicians from
Israel and from Arab countries. It was the product of a collaboration between
Daniel Barenboim, Yo-Yo Ma, and the (now late) Professor Edward Said of Columbia
University. The intent was not directly to facilitate the ever-stalling Middle
East peace process, but to use the shared artistic experience to foster cooperation
and dispel ignorance. Thus, at some of the string desks, you'd find an Arab
and an Israeli player working towards common artistic ends. To dispel ignorance
of "the other" - not just between Arabs and Jews, as Barenboim points out in
the booklet, but among various internal subgroups - is a worthy goal; should
you wish to support the endeavor, you get a nice two-disc set for your money.
It's difficult to think of another conductor who could have brought the needed
commitment and personal charisma to his task. To fashion miscellaneous players
into an ensemble is already hard enough without factoring in ethnic and political
complications. In these enthusiastic concert performances, Barenboim elicits
a level of polish from his young group comparable to that of a good standing
orchestra. Strings are vibrant and unified, while reeds and brass are suave.
One wonders whether better-quality wind and percussion instruments were brought
in, since I doubt Middle Eastern musicians have consistent access to good ones.
In any event, the players themselves needn't be ashamed of their accomplishment.
Measuring the performances against the existing discography, the picture becomes
cloudy. Tchaikovsky's relatively extroverted Fifth Symphony plays to Barenboim's
strengths - just as the Pathétique plays to his worst, most exhibitionistic
instincts. It’s an engaging performance. He draws nice contrasts among
the first movement's three theme-groups, not dragging the third as was once
customary. I also liked his no-nonsense Finale; the motto theme's triumphant
recap at 9:18 steps smartly, as does the 6/4 coda, the latter in the Markevitch
manner (Philips).
Unfortunately, Barenboim, who began as a pianistic prodigy, made the transition
to the podium without having acquired a stick technique commensurate with his
perceptions or his ambitions. As the smudged opening attack suggests, his signals
can still fall short in matters of basic clarity. Once past that start, the
players settle in for a while, with the string swells generating a brooding
intensity. That said, the little running figures sound nervous after 3:12, as
they do almost any time there are moving secondary parts. It is as if Barenboim
were primarily conducting the tunes and ignoring the counterpoint. He has a
nice feel for the Andante's expressive contours, but ensemble at 2:57,
among other spots, is as approximate as in his Chicago account (Warner). The
latter two, more straightforward, movements suffer less. The first time around
in the Finale's coda, the lagging trumpet comes unstuck from everyone
else, but this sounds like the player missed a spur-of-the-moment tempo choice
- the others, after all, are together - rather than the result of a confusing
beat.
The Forza overture is nicely dramatic, with Barenboim giving the broad
lyrical themes plenty of room to expand and "sing". Coordination again becomes
touch-and-go in the counterpoint at about 4:40. No such problems mar the Sibelius,
correctly sombre, but maintaining the underlying waltz-like lilt.
The recorded sound conveys Tchaikovsky's massed tuttis and the brasses
in the Verdi with a particularly impressive depth. The thickish orchestral sonority
is, I suspect, what was actually heard in the hall, rather than an engineering
flaw. Applause has been edited out. The second disc, a DVD, offers the same
performances of Tchaikovsky and Verdi; a thirty-three minute documentary, "Lessons
in Harmony"; and a conversation between Barenboim and Said.
Stephen Francis Vasta
Stephen Francis Vasta is a New York-based conductor, coach, and journalist.
Masterwork Index: Tchaikovsky
Symphony 5