This new recording of Schnittke's Symphony No. 
    3 was made in the studio and is conducted by the Berlin-based and Moscow-born 
    Vladimir Jurowski. There are few orchestras that play twentieth-century music 
    as well as the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin. They have performed in a 
    number of excellent recordings including the acclaimed set of the complete 
    Hans Werner Henze symphonies and other orchestral works on Wergo (
review 
    review).
    
    It is difficult to claim a single compositional voice from Alfred Schnittke 
    as the multi-faceted nature of his music ranges from Arvo Pärt
-like 
    spirituality to twelve-tone or ‘serial’ to neo-classical and to 
    what he described as ‘polystylism’ an eclectic approach of varying 
    often contradictory styles. Born to a Jewish father and German Roman Catholic 
    mother, but raised in the Soviet Union, Schnittke was one of the foremost 
    composers of the post-Shostakovich generation. He lived under the strictures 
    of Soviet cultural policy and suffered from disapproval by the authorities 
    for being too Western-European influenced. The increasing opportunities that 
    Glasnost presented in the USSR assisted Schnittke’s emergence as a composer 
    of international note. He became highly fashionable for a time, although, 
    it is rare to see his music programmed today. A prolific composer, he has 
    been especially effective in the field of unaccompanied sacred choral with 
    his 
Konzert für Chor (
Concerto for Choir) considered by 
    many to be a choral masterpiece.
    
    Schnittke wrote eight symphonies leaving a ninth unfinished together with 
    an early symphony No. ‘0’ which he didn’t acknowledge. They 
    have all been reocrded by Bis in their Schnittke Edition (BIS-CD-1767/68). 
    By the time of writing the complex Symphony No. 3 in 1981 Schnittke had some 
    years earlier lost his rather short-lived fascination for the Western avant-garde 
    and was following a ‘polystylism’ approach of composition. The 
    Symphony No. 3 a commission for the inauguration of the new Gewandhaus was 
    premièred the same year by the Leipzig Gewandhausorchester under Kurt Masur. 
    Owing to this provenance the work is sometimes referred to as the ‘Leipzig’ 
    Symphony. In the Soviet Union the first performance was given in 1982 by the 
    USSR Ministry of Culture Symphony Orchestra under Gennadi Rozhdestvensky who 
    recorded it in 1984 for Melodiya (SUCD 10 00064). It’s a massive work 
    cast in four movements and orchestrated in the manner of Richard Strauss and 
    Mahler requiring one hundred and eleven orchestral players.
    
    It is not always easy to make sense of its construction
. Schnittke 
    incorporates paraphrases from Austro/German music and uses quasi-quotes rather 
    than literal quotes from a line-up of twenty-eight Austro/German composers 
    from initials of their names ‘monograms’ and also a small number 
    of words emblematic to the commission such as ‘Leipzig’ and ‘Thomaskirche’ 
    all woven into the writing
. These quasi-quotes lie hidden 
    and I certainly couldn’t detect any particular themes from any composer 
    except in the opening of the first movement which evokes the drone of the 
    
Prelude from Wagner’s 
Das Rheingold and Mozart’s 
    
Piano Sonata in C major, K545.
    
    There's a formidable visceral energy about the writing and this coupled 
    with intense engagement from Jurowski’s Berlin players creates a wide 
    range of sonorities performed brilliantly and with real élan. The concentration 
    given to the opening movement 
Moderato is remarkable. That 
Rheingold 
    theme puts in an appearance and the dynamics swell gradually in menace from 
    an almost inaudible pianissimo to a tremendous climax that recurs three times. 
    Marked 
Allegro the opening of the second movement is vibrant and 
    fresh - almost playful, dance-like, delicate and certainly charming. Several 
    mood-changes occur suddenly and as the drama increases the writing becomes 
    darker and more serious in tone. Especially memorable are the sinister feel 
    to the harpsichord part, a haunted Straussian waltz and the electric guitar 
    breaks. There is also what sounds like a quotation from the 
Prelude and 
    Fugue No. 1 from J.S. Bach’s 
Well-Tempered Clavier - Book 1 
    (9.50-10.01) and in the 
Coda a direct quotation from Mozart’s 
    
Piano Sonata in C, K545. This eventually fades away on a cheerless 
    note to nothing. Movement three, an 
Allegro pesante which extensively 
    employs varied use of the monogram ‘
das Böse’(
The 
    Evil), opens with ominously dark, weighty indeed fearsome music. This 
    could easily represent the heavy tread of the Giants and the Dragon leitmotifs 
    in 
Das Rheingold. The electric guitar wails and screams away repetitively 
    and as the orchestral weight swells at point 6.53, clangorous, menacing and 
    martially percussive, the loudness becomes almost unbearable. At nineteen 
    minutes the lengthy 
Finale - Adagio contains a series of variations 
    based on all twenty-eight composer monograms transformed into twelve-note 
    rows and several themes. The prevailing mood is that of an uneasy calm with 
    a curious sense of exhaustion evoking a bleak inhospitable wasteland, an aural 
    picture I find so characteristic of Shostakovich. In a central passage the 
    atmosphere is broken gradually as the weight and intensity increases for a 
    fire-breathing outburst at 11.55-12.43. The uneasy and rather austere quietness 
    returns and gradually decays to a silence in a way reminiscent of the haunting, 
    rather otherworldly temperament of Strauss’s 
Death and Transfiguration.
    
    Recorded at the Großer Sendesaal, Haus des Rundfunks of RBB with the Seifert 
    organ at St. Matthias-Kirche, Schöneberg added later the sound quality of 
    this SACD played on my standard player is out of the top drawer. A minor grumble 
    is that fifty-two minutes is rather short measure and it’s hard to fathom 
    why an additional work wasn’t placed on the release. Nevertheless the 
    fascination of Schnittke’s 
Symphony No. 3 and the quality of 
    this sublime performance from the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin under 
    Vladimir Jurowski combine for a compelling aural experience. A release to 
    entice the reasonably adventurous, this will undoubtedly be one of my 2015 
    Records of the Year.
    
    
Michael Cookson