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Smetana: Orchestral Works, Vol. 1
Bedrich Smetana, Gianandrea Noseda, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra
Smetana: Orchestral Works, Vol. 1
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

No Description Available. Genre: Classical Music Media Format: Compact Disk Rating: Release Date: 23-OCT-2007

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Bedrich Smetana, Gianandrea Noseda, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra
Title: Smetana: Orchestral Works, Vol. 1
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Chandos
Original Release Date: 1/1/2007
Re-Release Date: 10/23/2007
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
Styles: Marches, Ballets & Dances, Polkas, Forms & Genres, Symphonies, Theatrical, Incidental & Program Music, Symphonies
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 095115141328

Synopsis

Product Description
No Description Available.
Genre: Classical Music
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 23-OCT-2007
 

CD Reviews

Dramatic, Picturesque: Orchestral Music of Smetana
M. C. Passarella | Lawrenceville, GA | 01/13/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This disc is marked Volume 1, and presumably, some of the projected volumes will feature Smetana's orchestral masterpiece, "Ma Vlast," and his ubiquitous "Bartered Bride" music. But if you are familiar only with these works, you'll be surprised to find buried treasure by way of the current disc, which contains no fewer than three fine tone poems worthy to be mentioned with Smetana's great later cycle. Of the three, "Wallenstein's Camp" (1859) is perhaps the most Lisztian. It's an exciting but episodic portrayal of life in a military camp and rather reminiscent of Liszt's equally episodic and martial "Mazeppa."



"Richard III" is an effective musical portrait of Shakespeare's villain. Smetana even attempts to musically portray Richard's lurching gait, but more, there is some tender and noble music as well, hinting that just as in real life, Richard was not all villain but had elements of greatness in him. (In fact, Shakespeare's Richard is more of a pure stage villain than Smetana seems to make him out to be.)



Best of the three is the last in date of composition, "Hakon Jarl" (1861), which portrays a true heathenish villain, usurper of the throne of Norway, who is finally trounced by the forces of good. The piece begins with chilling music--a sort of hiss from the orchestra that perfectly mirrors Hakon Jarl's evil intent. From there, it just gets better. This is one tone poem that invites comparison with the best of Tchaikovsky and Strauss, I think.



And that's not all. There is a rip-roaring early concert overture imbued with just as much drama as are the three tone poems; wait till you hear the wild part for the timpanist! Smetana apparently regretted later that the overture was cast in sonata form, which I guess he felt straight jacketed the dramatic elements of the work. Sounds like Smetana: even when he wrote in sonata form in his chamber music, such as the forceful Piano Trio and the quartet "From My Life," he wasn't content to let the abstract musical formula stand for itself but felt compelled to tell a story. Like Tchaikovsky, his talent was essentially dramatic and pictorial.



So it is that the other bits and pieces recorded here include a very painterly rendering of a poem by Goethe about a fisherman who is first cajoled and then drowned by a sinister river sprite. The watery music at the start sounds awfully much like the slow music in the Moldau, where Smetana paints the river by moonlight. But in "The Fisherman," Smetana adds the wheezy, spooky comments of a harmonium, a strange but masterful touch. Then there is a piece called "The Peasant Woman," which is a page right out of the Bartered Bride, a rollicking folk dance.



The only work that I can't warm to (and never could) is "Prague Carnival," written in the throes of tertiary syphilis, which would claim Smetana's sanity, his eyesight, and finally his life. The most that one can say for the piece is that it seems chillingly to portray the mad whirl of the carnival as heard and seen by one cut off, one whose illness has forever removed him from a sense of perspective and reality.



Except for this last work (and the notes to the recording mount a valiant defense of "Prague Carnival" as well), all of the music paints its pictures and tells its stories with a sure hand: beautifully orchestrated, with lavish melodies, this is all really pretty wonderful stuff. And while Smetana has had famous fellow countrymen as advocates over the years, Italian conductor Noseda seems to the manner born. These performances are at least the equals of Kubelik's famous ones from the 1970s (still available on DG), and the sound is much, much finer, up to Chandos' usual high standards. I can't recommend this disc highly enough.

"
..3.5 stars -- about average and does not challenge Kubelik'
Larry VanDeSande | Mason, Michigan United States | 04/02/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Since he recorded the classic stereo collection of Smetana tone poems in 1972, Rafael Kubelik has been the consensus leader in the repertory. His recording has seen many challengers. Recently, first Vladimir Valek, and then Theodore Kuchar, recorded three-CD collections of Smetana's orchestral music. Now comes Gianandrea Noseda in what is likely to be another complete collection to compete with the sets by Valek and Kuchar.



In this installment, Noseda includes the big three tone poems and some other trifles to fill out his CD at 75:30. While the add-ons are variably nice and ordinary and give you a limited perspective into Smetana's ability to write concert music, it is the meaty tone poems that is the reason anyone should consider buying this CD.



Here we deal with the three so-called "Swedish" tone poems. The trio -- Richard III, Wallenstein's Camp and Hakon Jarl -- represent a peak in Czech national music in the tone poem genre along with compositions by Dvoark such as the Golden Spinning Wheel and The Noonday Witch. Like Dvorak's fabled tales, Smetana's are written on legends both Czech and otherwise.



Gianandrea Noseda, if you've never heard of him, is a young conductor whose first posts came in the late 1990s. He is (or was) chief conductor of the BBC Philharmonic, the orchestra represented here, and has recorded regularly with them. Along with what appears to be this new project of Smetana's orchestral music, the pair have recorded three CDs of Liszt tone poems. Those recordings have received poor reviews in USA and better reviews in England, where certain organizations praise anything published by UK-based Chandos.



I think Noseda is OK in Smetana's creations but not very individual and not intemperate, a quality the gives the music heart and wing. He conducts well and the orchestra plays well for him, in a reserved British way, but these recordings lack the umption and emotional abandon Kubelik brings to them in his 1972 recording, which is paired with a meatier makeweight -- Janacek's Sinfonietta. When Kubelik conducts Wallenstein's camp, you are right there with the men at daybreak. When Noseda conducts it, it is another concert on a CD.



I've heard Noseda previously on freebie CDs I get with my subscrition to BBC Music Magazine. He tends to extend and compress tempos so they are either faster or slower than most competitors. I think this worked well on a BBC Music Nag recording of Prokofiev's Symphony 5. But American critics blasted him for dragging tempos in his Liszt recordings. I think he eschews this character, for the most part, in this recording, and I think that's probably a good thing. He does tend to get a little too quiet sometimes, however.



I last listened to a new recording of these tone poems when the Kuchar collection came out from Brilliant last year. Kuchar, an American, was assisted by the Janacek Philharmonic Orchestra. I graded his complete set four stars. In the tone poems, I thought Kuchar didn't match Kubelik either but he came closer than Noseda, whose lower pressure and temperature versions lack the Kubelik's vision and the commitment he encouraged from the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra.



As to the sound, I was surprised to learnon direct comparison that there isn't much difference between the two. Noseda's 2007 recording may have an edge in definition or a tad more presence but Kubelik's classic sound is 98 percent of the way there and it's not the manufactured sound we often heard in the 1970s. Kubelik has a much better orchestra and, with a better addition in the Janacek, the totality of his package, even with some skimpy notes, puts him head and shoulders above this and the other newcomers.



If you are shopping around for a set of Smetana's tone poems (if you like the tone poems of Liszt, Tchaikovsky, Strauss or Dvoark you will enjoy these very much), you don't have to confine yourself to the newbies. Most great Czech conductors from the past have recorded some or all of them including Vaclav Neumann, Karel Sejna and Vaclav Talich. Some are in mono, some in stereo and one is in quadrophonic. I can't vouch for them although I suggest you avoid Kubelik's early mono version with Czech Philharmonic unless you really, really like old recordings. His stereo version on DG is much better, in my view.



It's still the breadwinner in this repertory, for me, and I suggest you ignore this issue and get it instead. If you can't find the out of print DG pressing on Amazon (they were available for as little as $8.50 the day I wrote this), Arkiv Music has bought the rights and will burn you a copy for $17. It may seem a lot to pay for an older recording but you'll soon see, and hear, that it is in fact a very good buy, much better than this one."