Igor STRAVINSKY (1882-1971)
 Stravinsky Edition
 Various Orchestras/Riccardo Chailly
 rec. 1980-2017. DDD.
    
    Texts and translations included.
Limited Edition
 Reviewed as download from press preview.
 DECCA 4851367
    [11 CDs: 720:15]
	
    Igor Stravinsky lived long enough to see the advent of miniskirts and disco
    music, but you would never know that from skimming through most of the
    recently issued big boxes of his music. Thrust out into the market just in
    time for the 50th anniversary of Stravinsky’s death, most pointedly exclude
    the serial scores from his final creative decade—which makes Decca’s
    reboxing of the recordings of Stravinsky’s music by Riccardo Chailly all
    the more welcome. The box neatly traces the progression of Chailly’s own
    career, from vigorous podium lion in the making to seasoned international
    maestro, an evolution dramatically documented on his two recordings of
    Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring.
 
    Chailly’s Cleveland Orchestra recording from 1985 established with almost
    terrifying force the talent of this still barely thirtysomething conductor.
    Even nearly 40 years later it is still tough to beat. Its sheer
    lustrousness of sound faintly recalls a recording made by another Riccardo
    leading a “Big Five” orchestra around the same time, but it is the
    chrome-polished precision of the Clevelanders, who sound as if the ghost of
    Dr. Szell was goading them from the great beyond, which makes this
    recording almost unbearably ferocious. The same interpretive outlines can
    be discerned in Chailly’s second recording, made in 2017 with the Lucerne
    Festival Orchestra, but the cumulative effect is altogether different.
 
    Whereas the earlier recording is unabashedly symphonic, the newer is like
    large-scale chamber music. Listen to the call-and-response of the flutes
    and bassoons near the end of “Dances of the Young Girls,” or the carefully
    calibrated shading of tone colors in “Mystic Circles of the Young Girls.”
    Yet, as lovely as these displays of musicianship on the part of the elder
    Chailly and his Lucerne players are, they feel as if they miss the point of
    the whole thing. After all, should a ballet which concludes in a human
    sacrifice be made to sound so pretty? It brings to mind Stravinsky’s
notorious remark about the earlier of Herbert von Karajan’s recordings of    The Rite of Spring sounding “too polished, a pet savage rather
    than a real one.” Chailly’s is less “pet savage” than nerd outfitted in
    skinny jeans and Warby Parker glasses who, nevertheless, insists that they
    are a real savage.
 
Likewise, Chailly’s recordings of the Scherzo fantastique and    Fireworks pale next to his earlier ones with the Concertgebouw
    Orchestra and Berlin Radio Symphony respectively. In the cases of those
    works, the gains made in suavity of transition are offset by the loss of
    the characterful playing of the Concertgebouw, especially their winds,
    which in the 1990s still retained a trace of the Gallic tartness cultivated
    in the days of Willem Mengelberg. It is a choice between starlit poetry in
    Amsterdam and Berlin versus efficient (if staid) prose in Lucerne.
 
Things improve considerably for the performance of the long lost    Funeral Song. Perhaps because he was leading its world premiere,
    Chailly draws a little bit of the energy of his former youthful self,
    delivering a performance that is dramatically taut, as well as alertful for
    those moments which augur the work of the later mature composer. While one
    may not want to do without the heavy Wagnerian underlining of Valery
    Gergiev in Munich or the lushness of Yannick Nézet-Séguin in Philadelphia,
    Chailly’s approach remains a benchmark in this relatively brief, but
    crucial score.
 
Very fine, too, is the Lucerne recording of    The Faun and the Shepherdess. Chailly expertly balances this
    score’s sometimes awkward mash-up of Mussorgsky and Debussy, although the
    richness of mezzo-soprano Sophie Koch’s voice tends to draw the listener
    closer to the Moscow River than the Seine.
 
    The rest of the set is mostly made up of Chailly’s Stravinsky recordings
    with the Concertgebouw, Berlin Radio Symphony, and London Sinfonietta. The
    outlier is a zestful live performance of the Tango, extracted from a 1920s
    program issued on disc about a decade ago. They range from the superb to
    the serviceable.
 
One of the highlights is certainly his powerfully inflected, even blunt    Symphony of Psalms. 
	The tendency of conductors in recent times to Facetune the edges off the music they perform is especially unfortunate
    in Stravinsky’s music, where the roughness of rhythm and architecture is
    the point. Chailly rightfully emphasizes the score’s contradictions—part
    rough-hewn lubok, part glossy Art Deco stylization of Church
    ritual—keeping the respective parts for winds, percussion, and voices
    sticking out against the other rather than blending.
 
It is harder to choose between the two recordings of    The Song of the Nightingale included in the set. The earlier
    studio recording from Berlin is raucous, splashy, and practically unfolds
    in a Technicolor panoply before the listener; the live concert from
    Amsterdam is a little looser and lives a little more dangerously than its
    earlier counterpart.
 
    Elegant and energetic succinctly describes Chailly’s Concertgebouw
    recordings of Petrushka (1947 version) and The Firebird (1945
    suite). In the later score, the magician’s lovingly phrased and nuanced
    flute solo in “The Shrovetide Fair” sounds as if it really could bring
    puppets to life. “Petrushka’s Room” is colorful, cleanly etched, and
    delicately emotive; while the sparkle of the evening festivities in the
    fourth tableau (capped by an exuberant “Dance of the Coachmen”) make the
    broken shards of sound trailing off into the darkness at the ballet’s close
    all the more moving. In the earlier score, the Concertgebouw strings convey
    a multitude of subtle dark shadings in the “Introduction.” The full
    ensemble give one’s speakers a good workout in their roof-raising readings
    of the “Dance of Katschei” and “Finale.”
 
    On the other hand, the recordings of the chamber orchestra works with the
    London Sinfonietta, energetic and muscular though they are, sometimes lack
    the acidic bite heard on the best recordings (starting with the composer’s
own). But their well-proportioned yet vital reading of    The Rake’s Progress continues to reward the listener, not least
    for the artistry of Samuel Ramey, whose Nick Shadow is perched between
    Mephistophelean used car salesman and evil incarnate.
 
    Also less than great is Chailly’s early 2000s reading of Agon,
    which betrays discomfort with this eclectic music. The Concertgebouw also
    sound a bit sluggish, occasionally fallible. Stravinsky’s own recording
    with Franz Waxman’s Los Angeles Festival Orchestra, now over half a century
    old, leaves Chailly wheezing in the dust.
	(Sony G010003467992A, download only, with Canticum sacrum).
 
    It was always regrettable that Chailly never recorded Oedipus Rex
    for Decca. His Italian opera credentials would seem ideal in a score that
    was as much “macabre present” to Diaghilev as it was to Verdi. This set,
    thankfully, fills in that gap with a live Dutch performance that more than
    lives up to one’s expectations. Chailly’s performance is punchy and brawny.
    Stravinsky’s Verdian references are loving and tartly ironic all at once.
    The vocal cast is good, but not on the level of the best recordings.
    Waltraud Meier is an imposing, if wooly Jocasta; Jan-Hendrik Rootering a
    weighty and distinguished Tiresias. But Robert Dean Smith’s Oedipus cannot
    approach the bombastic, self-absorbed, and vulnerable interpretation by
    René Kollo on Leonard Bernstein’s recently reissued recording, for example.
	(Bernstein conducts Stravinsky Sony 19439854202, 6 CDs).
 
    If not comprehensive, the Chailly Stravinsky box is at least satisfyingly
    representative. From The Faun and the Shepherdess to Agon, we get a little bit from every period of Stravinsky’s protean career.
    That there is not more Stravinsky from Chailly is a shame. Listening to
    this box, one comes away missing the days when Chailly recorded more than
    just the Austro-German classics.
 
    Néstor Castiglione
 
    CD1
	[57:33]
 Le faune et la bergère 
    (Faun and Shepherdess) for voice and orchestra, Op 21
 Sophie Koch (mezzo)
 Feu d’artifice 
    (Fireworks), Op 41
 Chant Funèbre 
    (Funeral song – first recording)1
 Scherzo Fantastique, Op 31
 Zvezdolikiy 
    (Le Roi des Etoiles)2
 Feu d’artifice 
    (Fireworks), Op 42
 Scherzo Fantastique, Op 33
 rec. live 16-19 August, 20171; rec. 19842; rec. 1994    3
 
    CD2
	[71:02]
 
        
            Le sacre du Printemps (The Rite of Spring)1
 Renard4
 Philip Langridge (tenor), Neil Jenkins (tenor), Derek Hammond-Stroud
    (bass), Robert Lloyd (bass)
 Le Chant du Rossignol2
 rec. live 16-19 August, 20171; rec. 19884; rec. 1984    2
 
    CD3
    [71:35]
 Le rossignol 
    (The Nightingale)3
 L’Histoire du Soldat: Concert Suite4
 Octet for Wind Instruments4
 Suite No 14
 Suite No 24
 rec. 19804.
 
    CD4
    [71:19]
 Concerto in E flat for chamber orchestra ‘Dumbarton Oaks’4
 Tango
    4
 Ragtime, for eleven instruments4
 
        
            Danses Concertantes4
 Divertimento
    (symphonic suite from Le Baiser de la Fée)4
 rec. 19804
 
    CD5
    [81:09]
 
        
            Pulcinella (complete)3
 Anna Caterina Antonacci (soprano), Pietro Ballo (tenor), William Shimell
    (baritone)
 Symphony of Psalms2 
 Rundfunkchor Berlin
 
        
            Jeu de Cartes3
        
    
 rec. 19842; 19923.
 
    CD6
    [70:45]
 Oedipus Rex3
 Violin Concerto in D3
 Alexander Kerr (violin)
 rec. live (previously released on Concertgebouw label)
 
    CD7
    [67:16]
 
        
            L’oiseau de feu (The Firebird)3
 Tango5
 
        
            Petrushka
        
    
    (1947 version)3
 rec. 1993.
 
    CD8
    [41:23]
 Four Norwegian Moods6
 
        
            Le sacre du Printemps (The Rite of Spring)
        
    
    (1947)6
 rec. 1985.
 
    CD9
    [53:18]
 
        
            Apollon musagète3
        
    
 
        
            Agon ‘Ballet for Twelve Dancers’3
        
    
 Apollon
    rec. 1995; Agon rec. live (date?)
 
    CDs 10 and 11
    [135:05]
 The Rake’s Progress4
 John Dobson, Astrid Varnay, Matthew Best, Stafford Dean, Samuel Ramey,
    Sarah Walker, Cathryn Pope, Philip Langridge, London Sinfonietta Chorus
 rec. 1985 –
    
        review
    
 
 Lucerne Festival Orchestra (live)1; Berlin Radio Symphony
    Orchestra2; Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra3; London
    Sinfonietta4; Gewandhausorchester Leipzig5; Cleveland
    Orchestra6