La Passione
Luigi NONO (1924-1990)
Djamila Boupacha
for soprano solo [5:00]
Franz Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
Symphony No.49 in f minor, Hob.I:49 ‘La Passione’ (1768) [27:27]
Gérard GRISEY (1946-1998)
Quatre Chants pour franchir le Seuil
for soprano and ensemble (1998) [40:13]
Ludwig Orchestra/Barbara Hannigan (soprano)
rec. 2019, Muziekcentrum van de Omroep, The Netherelands.
DDD.
Texts and translations included.
Reviewed as lossless (wav) press preview
ALPHA 586
[72:43]
For some time now, Alpha have been issuing a series of recordings of Haydn
symphonies, due to run until the tri-centenary in 2032, in which the music
is coupled with other works by his contemporaries or later composers. Some
of the combinations have been illuminating, others less so. Those
recordings are with two period-instrument orchestras, Il Giardino Armonico
and Kammerorchester Basel, both directed by Giovanni Antonini. The latest
release, on Alpha 682, offers symphonies Nos. 28, 43 (Mercury) and
63 (La Roxelane), with Bartók’s Romanian Folk Dances. I enjoyed the
lively and persuasive recordings of the symphonies as much as those in the
earlier volumes, but didn’t think the Bartók coupling very relevant –
Winter 2019-20/2.
The present recording, made with the Ludwig Orchestra, stands outside that
series. It’s designed as much for Barbara Hannigan to display her vocal
talents in the works which precede and follow the Haydn; there she shines
in the dual role of soloist and conductor, in the Haydn solely as
conductor.
For reasons which I hope to explain, I found the combination of music on
this CD even less illuminating than the Haydn-Bartók combinations – bizarre,
even.
The Ludwig Orchestra, a group of Dutch musicians which varies in size
according to the work being performed, present us with what might best be
described as a good old-fashioned modern-instrument recording of the Haydn.
Of all the works of Haydn’s Sturm und Drang period, this has been
thought the one most worthy of the title of La Passione, partly
because of its possible association with Holy Week – perhaps for
performance on Good Friday
itself – and partly because of its emotionally stormy nature. Barbara
Hannigan’s description in the booklet of how she views the work may seem
over-hyped – “The harpsichord is the dark, lost angel. I asked her to
stumble and fumble in the darkness, on a different path than the strings,
her wings confined within her shroud, her body half dead and her heart
unaware of the love she has left behind” – but that’s the way that these
things get written.
It might have been much better to have given us at least the date of the
symphony and to have mentioned the links between the symphony and the older type of sinfonia da chiesa, with an opening adagio movement. And how
about a translation of the title of the Grisey (four songs for crossing the
threshold, if that makes you any the wiser).
Forget the booklet, and the performance is far from over-hyped. In fact, the
Haydn who emerges from this recording is an urbane and amenable
composer rather than an angry young man. That’s partly the effect of a
fairly beefy orchestra, more appropriate in size to the later Paris and
London symphonies than to this work composed for the Esterházy orchestra,
where only around 12 to 16 players would have been available. The good
recording makes the size of the orchestra all too apparent.
As it happens, Volume 1 of the Alpha Haydn 2032 series brings us a
period-instrument and period-scale recording of La Passione, the
work which gives its name to that album (Alpha 760) and to this. That also
includes Haydn’s Symphony No.1 with another of his Sturm und Drang
symphonies, No.39, and Glück’s Don Juan, another powerful work from
the period. In
DL News 2014/13
I described Giovanni Antonini’s performances of these symphonies as just
right, though I thought his account of the minuet and trio a shade
hard-driven by comparison with another recording directed by Gottfried von
der Goltz (Harmonia Mundi HMA1952029, budget-price,
DL News 2014/11).
If Antonini and von der Goltz seem a trifle fast in La Passione,
Barbara Hannigan and the Ludwig Orchestra really drag out the opening adagio. It certainly fits with her view of the symphony as the
middle piece in a triptych of serious works, but I think Haydn would have
felt more at ease with Antonini or von der Goltz or, to name a series of
Haydn recordings from a modern orchestra directed with a sense of period
performance, Ádám Fischer with the Austro-Hungarian Chamber Orchestra
(Nimbus NI7072, 2 CDs budget-price, Sturm und Drang Symphonies; see
also NI7041/2, Great Haydn Symphonies: Recording of the Month –
review).
Antonini brings out all the inherent feeling of that opening adagio
at almost exactly twice Hannigan’s tempo and with a much smaller orchestra
in which the individual strands can be heard clearly within the overall
sound picture. The other recordings mentioned are also more to the
point – and I could name several more which do so. After the
first movement, however, Hannigan moves the music along in a much more
spirited manner.
The Haydn, then, is a modified success for me. The rest of the recording,
I’m sorry to say, is unlikely to appeal to those who buy the CD for the
sake of that central work. If you have heard the Gerard Hoffnung
‘performance’ of the music of Bruno Heinz Jaja, that’s a thinly disguised
and very apt parody of the likes of Luigi Nono, whose Djamila Boupacha opens the
programme of the new Alpha. I’m sure that the composition arose from true
identification with the fate of this young proponent of Algerian
independence, but Nono is a no-no for me, the music as angular and, for me,
as off-putting as can be.
Nor did I fare much better with the final work by Gerard Grisey, again
despite Hannigan’s highly imaginative description of the music. Orchestras
often combine more traditional works with music by contemporary composers
in concert in order to get new music better known, but choosing a CD is a different
matter and buyers surely tend to go for what they expect to like. Probably those
who would buy the album for the Nono and Grisey would be no more likely to
want the Haydn than I was impressed by the opening and closing music.
Mercifully, the Nono is short, but the Grisey takes up over half of the
recording. I tried very hard to come to terms with the longest section, La mort de l’humanité, based on words from The Epic of Gilgamesh. That early epic is a work that I’ve loved
since I bought the Penguin Classics translation sixty years ago – there’s
now a better edition, based on more recent discoveries. I can truly say that it
doesn’t have the same effect on me as Quatre Chants pour franchir le Seuil. I’m not sure which doorstep
the music is supposed to get us over, to translate the title. There is some
music outside my comfort zone that I expect one day to come to terms with,
but I doubt if this is one such – apart, perhaps, from the closing berceuse.
It's clearly a favourite work of Barbara Hannigan - she has recorded it with
the New York Philharmonic on a download-only recording on their house label
(NYP20110107). In all fairness, I should add that Herbert Culot
thought another recording of the Quatre Chants on the Kairos label
deeply moving -
review - and Anne Ozario thought the work, as performed live by Hannigan
in 2008, a masterpiece -
review.
If it’s the Haydn that you are looking for, do sample the Nono and Grisey –
most online sellers allow that, and subscribers to the likes of Naxos Music
Library can do it in more detail. In any case, however, the Haydn symphony
is better heard on the Antonini, von der Goltz and Fischer recordings. The
latter two come at an attractive price as, also, does Roy Goodman with the
Hanover Band (Hyperion Helios CDH55119, Symphonies 48-50, download only,
Ł7.99 in lossless sound, with pdf booklet, or Archive Service CD, from
hyperion-records.co.uk: see
DL Roundup March 2012/2).
Not the top recommendation, then, for the Haydn title piece. The other works fit
incongruously with it. I never like to write off a recording completely,
but I doubt if I shall be returning to any part of this. The cover shot of
someone drowning is all too apt.
Brian Wilson