Though there has undoubtedly been an upsurge 
                  of interest in the music of Ernst Toch over the last fifteen 
                  years or so, as evidenced by a number of recordings (see links 
                  to reviews below), it cannot really be said that he now occupies 
                  any kind of settled place in the modern mainstream. He seems 
                  doomed to remain to some extent an outsider, perhaps not inappropriately 
                  given the circumstances of his life and career. 
                Toch was one of 
                  the many musicians whose lives were disrupted and distorted 
                  by the ascendancy of the Nazis. Escaping actual death at their 
                  hands, his career as a composer was robbed of the possibility 
                  of organic development. 
                Born in Vienna, 
                  Toch had established himself as a significant composer in Weimar 
                  Germany by the 1920s. Compositions such as the Piano Concerto, 
                  premiered in 1926 by Walter Gieseking (conducted by Hermann 
                  Scherchen), his early quartets and piano sonatas, his opera 
                  Die Prinzessin auf der Erbse (1927), all served to raise 
                  him to a position of some prominence. His music merited discussion 
                  in the context of the work of such figures as Berg, Krenek, 
                  Weill and Hindemith. With the rise of Hitler – the significance 
                  of which Toch realised sooner than some of his even less fortunate 
                  fellows – he took an early opportunity to flee abroad. In April 
                  1933 he was attending a musicological conference in Florence; 
                  instead of returning to Germany he made his way to Paris and 
                  then to London, where his wife and young daughter joined him; 
                  in 1934 the young family moved to America.
                It took Toch the 
                  composer a very long while to recover from this major fracture 
                  and dislocation. He taught (one pupil, indeed, was Andre Previn) 
                  and he wrote film scores. Between 1934 and 1950 he wrote relatively 
                  little ‘serious’ music. From about 1950 until his death, however, 
                  he began to write with real energy and commitment again – producing, 
                  amongst other important works, seven symphonies, a further opera 
                  and a number of chamber works.
                The works on this 
                  outstanding disc, however, come from his years in Germany. To 
                  say that the music makes one think, at one time or another, 
                  of Stravinsky or Weill, of Prokofiev or even Milhaud (the Milhaud 
                  of Création du Monde) does not, emphatically not, make 
                  him a derivative imitator; such names are invoked, rather, to 
                  indicate the kinds of music the unfamiliar listener will hear 
                  hinted at and alluded to in these works, and to suggest that 
                  it is not absurd to think of these early works in the context 
                  of such names – this is fine music, eclectically modernist but 
                  altogether accessible. 
                The six movements 
                  of the dance suite are delightfully inventive. The first movement 
                  (Roter Wirbeltanz) is intensely energetic, but some, 
                  at least, of its intensity carries an edge of threat, as if 
                  the composer was already aware of the dangers building up, the 
                  political intensities and energies which were later to disturb 
                  so much. There’s an edge of menace, too, in the second movement 
                  (Tanz des Grauens), especially in some of the pizzicato 
                  writing for strings and some biting passages for clarinet. The 
                  first Intermezzo (Fliessende Achtel) is less troubled, 
                  but fades away before it can really insist on a change of mood, 
                  before it can affirm the possibility of any emotional stability 
                  or simplicity. Complexity and emotional irony return in the 
                  Tanz des Schweigens, with a sense of foreboding, 
                  although the possibility of contentment is hinted at too. The 
                  fifth movement is another Intermezzo (Lebhaft) is acerbically 
                  assertive, a reminder, perhaps of the destructive threats hinted 
                  at earlier in the work. The last movement – the longest – carries 
                  the title Tanz des Erwachens; it opens in a sense of 
                  mystery, and seems to chart a transition from darkness into 
                  light, even if a hesitant light. Toch’s musical digestive system 
                  seems to have processed materials from both Debussy and Wagner, 
                  certainly both are present here, though both are finally subsumed 
                  in a conclusion which one might describe as Toch’s reinscription 
                  of the Viennese Waltz – and the work ends on a note of optimism 
                  (without ever encouraging the listener to forget the threats, 
                  the glances at the macabre and the hints of destructive madness 
                  which mark some of its earlier movements). A fine, subtle piece, 
                  which, while accessible and entertaining, certainly doesn’t 
                  give up its secrets easily – I shall certainly want (need) to 
                  listen to it many more times.
                Cellists ought to 
                  be queuing up to play the Concerto. It is a beautiful piece, 
                  and it is not hard to understand its early popularity – Emanuel 
                  Feuermann, who gave the premiere, is said to have performed 
                  it some sixty times in Germany in the late 1920s. It is full 
                  of complex – but not confusing – rhythmic twists and turns, 
                  but full also of a slightly acerbic lyricism. Written for chamber 
                  orchestra – and the resources are brilliantly exploited – the 
                  sound textures are always transparent, making it easier to follow 
                  Toch’s interesting musical argument. All four movements have 
                  pleasures to offer, whether it be the elegant second movement 
                  (marked agitato) or the well-made finale and the whole 
                  is more than just the sum of its parts. But the outstanding 
                  movement is perhaps the Adagio, with some quite gorgeous writing 
                  for the cello, richly expressive and beautifully integrated 
                  into the ensemble writing as the movement goes on. 
                The performances 
                  here are all that one could ask. They are – of course – technically 
                  assured; but far more than that they are both thoughtful and 
                  passionate (like Toch’s music), both committed and ironic (ditto). 
                  The recorded sound is excellent. The very same programme was 
                  recorded by the cellist Susanne Műller-Hornbach and the 
                  Mutare Ensemble in 1999 and issued on cpo 999 668-2 (see review 
                  by Jonathan Woolf ). I haven’t heard that recording, so I can 
                  make no kind of comparison. I find it hard, though, to imagine 
                  that it can be significantly better than this new version – 
                  even if there is a certain sad irony in the fact that it should 
                  be issued in the Naxos American Classics series.
                Glyn Pursglove
                Links to other reviews of Toch's music:
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2004/Jun04/Toch1_4.htm; 
                  http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2006/Apr06/Toch_symphonies_7771912.htm; 
                  http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2002/Mar02/Toch_quartets.htm; 
                  http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/sept01/Toch_cello.htm; 
                  http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2005/Sep05/toch_cantata_8559417.htm; 
                  http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2005/Feb05/Toch_Piano.htm
                
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