May 3, 2010
Spring quickens one's sense of delight and lifts one's spirits as the world awakens. Many puzzle over how the world began; I am still in wonder at how spring happens. With a child's appetite for repetition, I am always ready to say: Do it again! This is my inspiration for focusing mostly on delightful music this month.
I will first remind you of two quintessential works for welcoming in spring. The first is Benjamin Britten's magnificent Spring Symphony, with choral sections based on excerpts of English poetry from the 16th to the 20th centuries. I cannot imagine a more exuberant exclamation on behalf of this season. Try André Previn's great performance with the London Symphony Orchestra on EMI at budget price. The other indispensable work is Frank Bridge's Enter Spring. This is one of the great orchestral rhapsodies, or tone poems, which captures both the beauty and power of spring. I treasure the performance led by Sir Charles Groves with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, also on EMI, which captures the diaphanous magic, displays the influence of French impressionism on Bridge's work, and also generates overwhelming force.
The massive and dazzling forces of nature spring to mind in the new Uuno Klami CD released by Ondine (ODE 1143-2), with the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra, under John Storgards. I am a huge fan of 20th-century Scandinavian music, but this Danish composer's works are somewhat unfamiliar to me. What a revelation! Northern Lights, Cheremissian Fantasy, and the Kalevala Suite are strikingly impressive pieces. Klami (1900-1961) escaped from under the giant shadow of Sibelius by turning from Romantic nationalism and toward Russia (Stravinsky and Shostakovich) and France (Ravel), where he studied. Listen to the Bolero-like ostinato he uses to build tension in the Kalevala Suite. The Cheremissian Fantasy is a gorgeous cello concerto. He does not entirely escape Sibelius's influence, as can be heard in the last part of the Kalevala Suite. Regardless, these are highly imaginative, orchestrally brilliant works that Ondine has captured in one of the finest recordings I have heard this year.
I thought I was getting symphonies by Abbe Georg Joseph Vogler, whose Requiem I greatly admire, when I ordered a copy of Johann Christoph Vogel's Three Symphonies. What a difference a consonant makes! Nevertheless, Vogel's works are a surprising delight and confirm for me the very high standards of music in the second half of the 18th century. Some 20,000 symphonies were produced in this period of Haydn and Mozart, and I doubt if there is a time in music history that can compare in quality. These première recordings of Vogel's works by the Bavarian Chamber Philharmonic, under Reinhard Goebel, are a major treat (on OEHMS Classics OC 735). Anyone who cares for this era should not hesitate. The only sad note is that Vogel drank himself to death at age 32, depriving the world of further enchantment.