A
couple of years ago I reviewed a Naxos disc with de Falla’s two
ballets, El sombrero de Tres Picos and El amor brujo
(review).
While I quite liked that disc I also went back to the more than
40-year-old Reiner recording of El amor brujo, and although
I listened to it in the mono LP version I had owned since the
1960s it still almost bowled me over with enthusiasm. Now that
it appears again, this time in three-channel SACD format, it is
a pleasure to hear it in that much fuller, clearer and more detailed
sound. The mono was good in itself but the stereo spread made
so much more of nuances available and pin-point registration of
where the individual instruments were located in the soundscape.
Everything was there, as I remembered it, only a little more:
the eager introduction, the mysterious darkness of In the cave,
the frightening Dance of terror, the hushed concentration
of The magic circle, the incisive rhythm, the biting strings
and the impertinent trumpets of Ritual fire dance
with the recurring crescendos masterly judged and the glowing
warmth of Pantomime. What also was there was the raw, animal,
down-to-earth singing of Leontyne Price, hardly sophisticated
as Victoria de los Angeles, hardly Spanish but with an idiosyncratic
intensity that you either love or hate. What surprised me was
the impression of the voice half-buried in the orchestra, the
soloist seemingly standing somewhere in the woodwind section.
When played at moderate volume her singing lost a great deal of
its impact; when I turned it up several steps she sounded as I
remembered her, the hang-up being that the orchestra became almost
too impressive. Going back to the LP Ms Price’s voice actually
had greater prominence, just as I remembered it. Replaying Song
of love’s sorrow in the SACD version a couple of times made
me adjust to the balance and eventually I regarded the extra impact
of the orchestra as pure gain. Not forgetting Frühbeck de Burgos
with Victoria de los Angeles (EMI) I still regard Reiner’s as
the finest reading of this score, the extra refinement of the
Chicago Symphony’s playing being the deciding factor. Recorded
in March 1963 this must have been one of the Hungarian maestro’s
last recordings; he died in November that year, only a month before
his 75th birthday.
The
original coupling for El amor brujo was Les nuits
d’été by Berlioz, also with Leontyne Price. I hope that
it will also appear again. She isn’t the most French sounding
of soloists - for that one has to go to Régine Crespin - but
her reading still has that hard-to-define stamp of greatness.
Here we have instead a five year-older Spanish programme with
more music by de Falla and by his slightly older contemporaries
Albéniz and Granados. Three excerpts from The Three-Cornered
Hat are played with the same relish as the four years older
sister ballet. Especially in the Final Dance there is
a thrusting rhythmic vitality. From the opera La vida breve
we get the atmospheric but rather becalmed Interlude,
very much reflecting the opera as a whole: more atmosphere than
drama. One of the exceptions is the Danse espagnole No. 1,
here entitled only Dance, but it is the well-known piece
we have heard in sundry arrangements, most famously by Fritz
Kreisler. The original is springy and lushly scored and Reiner’s
reading is vigorous.
The
rest of the programme is made up of three movements from Albéniz’s
piano suite Iberia in the colourful orchestral transcriptions
by Enrique Arbós. Arrangements sometimes sound like arrangements
but these could just as well have been conceived for orchestra
from the outset. Arbós (1863–1939) originally became famous
as a virtuoso violinist, having studied with Vieuxtemps and
Joachim. Later he also embarked upon a career as one of Spain’s
greatest conductors. As a composer he became popular for some
violin pieces and also a piano trio. His comic opera El
Centro de la Tierra (1895) was regularly
played in Spain for a period. Today his fame rests primarily
on the Iberia arrangements. I believe Albeniz would have
liked them, since they catch the flavour of Spain more readily
than ‘plain’ piano music can ever do.
Also piano music from the beginning was Goyescas by Granados, a
suite inspired by the paintings of Francisco Goya, which he
partly used and developed into a three-act opera. It was premiered
at the Metropolitan Opera in New York on 28 January 1916 and
was a success – and a tragic one at that for the composer. As
a result of the success he was invited by President Wilson to
give a piano recital at the White House, thus having to postpone
his voyage back to Spain. In the English Channel his ship was
torpedoed by a German submarine on 24 March and both Granados
and his wife lost their lives. The Intermezzo is the
best known piece from the opera and is often performed separately.
It is delicious music, beautiful, suggestive and expertly scored.
Very early on I had a beloved recording of this piece with Karajan
and the Philharmonia Orchestra. I bought the EP for the Cavalleria
rusticana intermezzo but it was the Granados that I returned
to most often. Good as Karajan was, Fritz Reiner is even more
captivating, finding a restrained, hesitant lilt in the slow-moving
music that is absolutely enchanting. I would opt for this for
my desert island collection but the whole disc is splendid and
the fresh SACD sound certainly belies its age.
The booklet has notes on El amor brujo with a short résumé of the
plot and an essay on Spanish music in general.
Göran Forsling