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Reinhold GLIÈRE (1875-1956)
Symphony No.3 Op.42 ‘Il’ya Murometz’ (1909-11) [72:20]
London Symphony
Orchestra/Leon Botstein
rec. Watford Town Hall, January 2002 TELARC
CD-80609 [72:20]
Glière’s
sprawling, programmatic epic is rather an unwieldy, episodic
work, or at least can sound like it in the wrong hands. It’s
of Mahlerian or Brucknerian length but without their control
of structure, rather like a much longer Manfred, and
it’s down to the skill of the orchestration that the piece
is so hugely enjoyable to wade through.
In
this Telarc version conductor/scholar Leon Botstein restores
the complete 1911 score, making the piece even longer but
making slightly more sense. There are still countless audible
influences in every movement, and a lot of the material is
way too thin for its treatment. However, with gloriously
ripe sound and tremendously committed playing from the LSO,
it still makes for an absorbing listening experience.
The
dedication of the score is to Glazunov, and the Russian nationalist ‘tradition’ is
here in spades, with particular echoes of Stravinsky (Petrushka)
and Scriabin’s Poem of Ecstasy, but as if filtered
through a Wagnerian lens. There are also wisps of Glière’s
near-exact contemporary, Sibelius in places, especially in
some of the melodic material of the long first movement ‘Wandering
Pilgrims’. Of course, what happens to that material is the
key, and at over 22 minutes even Glière’s considerable skills
are sorely stretched. Mind you, the main theme is indeed
a noble one, the LSO brass having a field day with the big
climaxes, as from 12:20 onwards.
The
second movement, subtitled ‘Il’ya Murometz and Solovei the
Brigand’, is also over 20 minutes long and the most Wagnerian
in mood and colour, with references to The Ring throughout
(Siegfried Act 2, loads of Walküre). But it
is very deftly scored and if you follow Anthony Burton’s
excellent synopsis of the story, the music makes a lot of
sense.
The
scherzo of the symphony is the most obviously Russian movement,
entitled ‘At the Court of Vladimir the Mighty Sun’. It’s
a short, 7-minute musical illustration of a feast, with the
massive orchestra used once again with great sophistication.
The
huge finale is in almost identical proportion to the first
movement, some 22 minutes long, thus framing the whole work.
Again, the harmonies are opulent, the scoring brilliant and
here the mood takes an almost Rachmaninov-like turn into
Russian melancholy. The subtitle is ‘The Heroic Deeds and
Petrification of Il’ya Murometz’, so you can guess the way
the legend plays out. Here Botstein gives the phrases more
breathing space, allowing the massive climaxes plenty of
space and impact. He is pretty exemplary throughout, seeing
the longer line and letting the music unfold with complete
naturalness.
As
far as modern versions go, the competition for this work
really only amounts to Edward Downes and the BBC Philharmonic
on Chandos, a very good version at comparable price. I have
heard it, and don’t remember being quite as impressed as
here, though memory can play tricks. The Telarc recording
is certainly a state-of-the-art test for your hi-fi, and
if you fancy a wallow in the glorious Indian summer of late
Romanticism, you can treat yourself with confidence.
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