This recording is a by-product of Nott 
                and the Bamberg Symphony’s project of 
                presenting concerts of Schubert symphonies 
                coupled with contemporary orchestral 
                works in some manner inspired by Schubert. 
                The Schubert symphonies were issued 
                separately (Tudor 7141-3 review), 
                as was a companion disc, "Schubert 
                Epilog", of works by Berio, Henze, 
                Reimann, Schwertsik, and Zender (Tudor 
                7131). I will discuss the present disc 
                as a stand-alone issue. 
              
 
              
The notes claim that, 
                "originally Widmann wanted the 
                entire orchestra to intone ‘a sort of 
                eternal melody’ of great intensity". 
                Without reference to Schubert Widmann 
                would "not have risked such radical 
                singing". What I hear in this work 
                is not Schubert, but the late romanticism 
                of Bruckner, Wagner and early Schoenberg. 
                There is a hunting horn theme that sounds 
                almost lifted from Siegfried, 
                and a general yearning expansiveness 
                of brass and string writing evocative 
                of Tristan and Isolde. Yet other 
                aspects, including a sharp glass-edge 
                sound to the strings, remind one that 
                Widmann is a grandchild of the Second 
                Viennese School, particularly of the 
                Berg camp. If you are a fan of any of 
                the composers I have used as comparisons, 
                then you will like this work as much 
                as I do. 
              
 
              
Rihm’s Erscheinung 
                (appearance or apparition), begins with 
                single notes or chords sounded in intervening 
                silence by the piano. A couple of minutes 
                of this leads into largely monophonic 
                writing for an ensemble of nine string 
                players. This thirteen minutes of string 
                music tells a musical story comparatively 
                lacking in the feel of "randomness" 
                compared to Rihm’s other work. We experience 
                a journey that begins with foreboding, 
                turns brighter with feelings of curiosity 
                and discovery, goes through a period 
                of frenzied energy, concluding with 
                a sense of arrival. This is the most 
                accessible of the composer’s works I 
                have encountered. It would serve as 
                a great introduction to his idiom, even 
                if his own over-inflated comments regarding 
                his intentions ("It is chamber 
                music — and yet not orchestral music 
                — and yet not ... Both a swollen chamber 
                ensemble and a shrunken orchestra") 
                are best taken lightly. 
              
 
              
If one imagines Boulez 
                with passion and a danceable, early-Stravinskian 
                sense of rhythm, one gets a sense of 
                Bruno Mantovani (not to be confused 
                with the ‘easy listening’ Mantovani) 
                in Mit Ausdruck (with expression). 
                It is a work for bass clarinet and orchestra. 
                The Boulez connection is not coincidental, 
                as Mantovani studied at IRCAM. What 
                may be more of a mystery is that he 
                is very far from having succumbed to 
                intellectualized abstraction. The sound 
                of the bass clarinet provides a mellow, 
                tuneful alternative to the often pungent 
                and strident tone of its higher-pitched 
                sibling. Mit Ausdruck might well 
                be described as a Rite of Spring 
                in the form of a dialog between the 
                bass clarinet on the one hand, and the 
                orchestra and a very active percussion 
                section on the other. The bass clarinetist, 
                Alain Billard, is the work’s dedicatee. 
              
 
              
It is with Schnebel’s 
                Schubert-Phantasie that we hear 
                the first instantly recognizable extract 
                from Schubert, which is the opening 
                from the D 894 piano sonata. The work 
                consists of this theme struggling against 
                being pulled into a diffuse, often turbulent, 
                undercurrent of sound. Though there 
                is an intended logic here, it sounds 
                to some degree like a compositional 
                brainstorming session. It is, to my 
                mind, the least musically coherent of 
                the works here, and thus least likely 
                to hold up to repeated listening, even 
                if it has the most prominent "hook". 
              
 
              
Nott, the Bamberg Symphony, 
                and the soloists perform with commitment 
                and familiarity. The recording is by 
                turns analytical and powerful as needed. 
              
 
              
Despite the programmatic 
                theme of "Schubert Dialog", 
                clear references or evocations of the 
                Romantic composer are rare in all but 
                Schnebel’s work. However, the Schubertian 
                muse seems to have led these thorny 
                European modernists to be uncharacteristically 
                communicative and accessible. If you 
                think you might be interested in exploring 
                this genre, I would recommend this disc 
                to your attention. 
              
Brian Burtt