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Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)
Symphony No. 3 in F, Op. 90 (1883) [35:12]*
Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 (Pathétique) (1893) [46:09]
Novaya Rossiya State Symphony Orchestra/Yuri Bashmet
rec. in concert, Great Hall, Moscow Conservaory, April 2004, *February
2005
ICA CLASSICS ICAC 5023 [81:28]
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For veteran listeners, the two wind chords that launch the
Brahms symphony will be a dead giveaway. The first, while cleanly
attacked, sounds vaguely wheezy in tone rather than smoothly
blended. In the second chord, a single trumpet crescendos more
than everyone else, with a pressed vibrato. Ladies and gentlemen,
this is a Russian orchestra: in this instance, the Novaya Rossiya
State Symphony, founded in 1990, which actually has its act
pretty much together -- the strings are better than average
for a post-Soviet (post-mass-emigration) ensemble.
Yuri Bashmet, an accomplished violist -- no, that's not an oxymoron
-- has successfully directed his Moscow Soloists in a variety
of chamber-scaled repertoire on RCA; here he moves into the
big symphonic standards. This Brahms Third stresses melodic
flow and forward motion, sometimes to the point of sounding
hasty. In the first movement, Bashmet maintains his initial
surging tempo for the second subject, bringing out its dance-like
lilt; but he holds the pulse too strictly, losing the customary,
and desirable, "breath" at 1:58 before the big string
statement, matter-of-fact in its turn. That rest almost completely
disappears on the repeat, at 4:56, though this time the strings
play out more. At least one can't fault the conductor's feeling
for the movement's drama.
Bashmet seems undecided as to how to start the Andante,
laying out the opening theme forthrightly, but clouding the
issue with unmarked, "expressive" tenutos and
ritards; soon thereafter, he stops meddling and just plays the
music, though the three-against-two recap isn't the most secure.
The opening theme of the Poco allegretto, which George
Szell used to play with dark, expressive tone, sounds oddly
reined-in and lightweight here, though the sonority does expand
nicely as the movement progresses; the principal horn's old-fashioned
hint of unsteadiness in the recap shouldn't be disturbing. The
finale hustles along, just this side of rushing, but Bashmet
keeps control, and it works.
As you might expect, this Pathétique has many fine things
in it. The first movement receives an expressive, well-organized
performance, although a few of the pianos tip over into
inaudibility. The development, attacked with a taut, edge-of-the-seat
rhythmic alertness, is gripping; the final clarinet solo is
poignant, avoiding bathos. The Allegro con grazia moves
along nicely, though Bashmet's attempts at delicacy sound finicky,
and provoke a few horn burps along the way -- so much for con
grazia! The Allegro molto vivace is thrilling.
Unfortunately, the finale rules the entire performance out of
court. At the start, Bashmet -- like Daniel Barenboim in his
hideous Chicago account (Teldec/Warner) -- substitutes an effete,
drawn-out piano for the indicated forte, reducing
Tchaikovsky's cry of anguish to so much whining. Making matters
worse, the conductor tries to micro-manage the expression --
note by note, the way some pianists do when they take up the
baton -- which just makes it harder for the players to stay
together, particularly when the music moves. The non-landing
at 7:33-7:34 will leave you slack-jawed, not the good way.
The sound is vivid and colorful; the bass seems light, but perhaps
that's the playing rather than the recording. David Nice's note
in the booklet refers to "[t]he familiar rubato of the
Russian horn sound," which usage is simply incorrect: "rubato"
refers to rhythmic flexibility, not to tonal quality. It's a
shame about the generous timing -- all things considered, it's
not an asset.
Stephen Francis Vasta
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