Sunday, December 20, 2009

Sunday Classics: Our 2nd Annual "Very Tchaikovsky Christmas"

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Violinist Joshua Bell plays Tchaikovsky's most famous song, "None but the Lonely Heart," accompanied by Michael Stern and the Orchestra of St. Luke's. We're going to hear the song actually sung later.

by Ken

Last year I took advantage of the impending Christmas holiday to point out that you could get utterly delicious and authoritative performances of Tchaikovsky's three great ballets -- Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty, and The Nutcracker -- conducted by the distinguished ballet composer-arranger-conductor John Lanchbery, only slightly inconveniently scrunched onto five CDs, for under $20! I'll bet you can still find cheap copies around, but unfortunately EMI has deleted that set.

(There are Amazon vendors listing the individual ballets priced from $5.49 through $9.98, and even with three shipping charges added, that's a good buy. The six-CD set of André Previn's wonderful recordings with the London Symphony is still available, and as I write there are Amazon vendors selling it for as little as $11.90 and $14.99. You can also find inexpensive copies of the individual ballets. There's also a fine Decca set conducted by Richard Bonynge, and a host of attractively priced issues of all three ballets.)

We talked a little more about the Tchaikovsky ballets recently, and I'm sure we'll have occasion to come back to them. But for now --


I. VISIONS OF SUGAR PLUMS

Of course only The Nutcracker has a Christmas association. So just to touch base, I thought we'd start with the composer's own suite, from a slightly unexpected source -- this isn't music you necessarily associate with Leonard Bernstein.

TCHAIKOVSKY: Nutcracker Suite, Op. 71a

i. Overture


ii. Danses caractéristiques:
(a) March
(b) Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy
(c) Russian Dance (Trepak)
(d) Arabian Dance
(e) Chinese Dance
(f) Dance of the Mirlitons



iii. Waltz of the Flowers


New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein, cond. Columbia/CBS/Sony, recorded May 2, 1960


II. SONG OF THE RUSSIAN SOUL

As I mentioned in last night's Sunday Classics preview, I want to look at, or rather listen to, the element in Tchaikovsky's music that defies description without the words "soul" and "soulful." It is, as I suggested, one of the building blocks of Russian music, one of its most powerful appeals to non-Russian ears -- though perhaps also one of the things that certain later Russian composers worked like heck to get out from under. (Obviously I'm thinking of Igor Stravinsky.)

For some reason the music that pops to mind is from an operatic scene that appears to be something of a throwaway until you take into account how much it tells us about who these people are. It's the second scene of Act I of Tchaikovsky's not-at-all-faithful rendering of Pushkin's Queen of Spades (he had a very different agenda from that of the laconic poet-playwright), following hard upon one of the most action-packed, dramatic opening scenes in all of opera. At curtain rise we find our heroine, Lisa, entertaining a group of friends in her room in the home of her guardian, the old Countess.

As the scene starts [track 1], Lisa and her friend Paulina, who's at the piano (the libretto says "harpsichord," but I don't think I've ever heard that), sing a song about the setting of the sun, [2] to the approval of the others. Lisa urges Paulina to sing a song of her own, but it takes her a moment to think of something to sing, whereupon [3] she addresses her "dear friends" ("podrugi miliye," sung twice, with a tingling upward sweep on the second) and offers them a brooding song about former happiness and (yikes!) a grave. When the clarinet picks up the haunting tune of her song, Paulina chides herself for choosing such a morbid song, then [4] launches a "jolly Russian" ditty about a happy bridegroom and bride, which draws a suitably lively response from the girls until [5] Lisa's governess storms in upbraiding the girls for their raucous behavior, which has drawn a complaint from the Countess. (As we will hear, complaining comes readily to the old woman, especially when it concerns the shocking deterioration in behavior and standards.) Such behavior, the Governess explains, is appropriate in the servants' hall, but not for well-bred young ladies.


Mirella Freni (s), Lisa; Katherine Ciesinksi (ms), Paulina; Janis Taylor (ms), Governess; Tanglewood Festival Chorus, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Seiji Ozawa, cond. RCA/BMG, recorded Oct.-Nov. 1991

Unfortunately, I don't have a CD edition of the recording I would have liked to excerpt, the Bolshoi Opera's first stereo Queen of Spades, conducted by Boris Khaikin, in which the great dramatic mezzo-soprano Irina Arkhipova brought her deep, rich voice to this rather small role; she really makes you feel the upward sweep on that second "Podrugi miliye.") With the passage of time Arkhipova, like many distinguished Russian mezzos before (and after) her, migrated to the crotchety role of the old Countess. Here she is in Act II, Scene 2, sending her chattering maids off and expressing her vehement distaste for all things modern and then [track 2], giving voice to her preference for The Way Things Were, sings the aria "Je crains de lui parler la nuit" ("I fear speaking to him at night") from André Grétry's Richard the Lion-Hearted, from the last century.
OOPS, I LEFT OUT THE ARKHIPOVA CLIP!

So here, belatedly, is the great Irina Arkhipova -- at 66 -- singing the first bit of the Countess's scene in Act II, Scene 2 of Tchaikovsky's Queen of Spades:


Orchestra of the Kirov Theater, Valery Gergiev, cond. Philips, recorded May 1992

As long as we're in Queen of Spades and talking about "soul," it seems foolish to neglect the gorgeous aria, just possibly the most beautiful aria ever written, from the scene between the two we've sampled, Act II, Scene 1, the ball at which the dashing Prince Yeletsky, a prince in every imaginable sense, first has to persuade an evasive Lisa to linger with him a moment, then straightforwardly and unabashedly declares [track 2], "I love you." I've always thought it a measure of Tchaikovsky's scrupulous fairness as an artist that he portrayed Yeletsky so attractively, while the opera is trying to arouse sympathy for the tormented outsider, Gherman, who attracts Lisa's fascination.


Vladimir Chernov (b), Yeletsky; Maria Guleghina (s), Lisa; Orchestra of the Kirov Theater, Valery Gergiev, cond. Philips, recorded May 1992

Again, I'd have liked to present a different performance of Yeletsky's recitative and aria -- from the next-earliest Bolshoi Queen of Spades, conducted by Alexander Melik-Pashayev, with the peerless Armenian baritone Pavel Lisitsian. (I think Chernov sings it quite nicely, though.) By way of compensation, here is Lisitsian singing Tchaikovsky's "None but the Lonely Heart":


UPDATE: THE LISITSIAN RECORDING SUPPLIED!

Thanks to our friend Balakirev, we can hear one of the most stupendous pieces of singing I know, Lisitsian's recording of Yeletsky's aria from Queen of Spades -- including the preceding recitative. (I have a Russian Lisitsian LP on which the aria performance is neatly lifted out of the complete Queen of Spades, but without the lead-in, so it just starts with "Ya vas lyublyu." Unbelievable! No such dereliction from our friend B -- this week's Sunday Classics hero!) Wow! It's especially interesting to hear Lisitsian's performance alongside Vladimir Chernov's perfectly respectable one. If you want to hear the difference between pretty good singing and great singing, here it is. Wow!


Pavel Lisitsian (b), Yeletsky; Yevgenia Smolenskaya (s), Lisa; Bolshoi Theater Orchestra, Alexander Melik-Pashayev, cond. Melodiya, recorded c 1951

III. WORLD'S MOST SOULFUL SYMPHONIES

"Heart on sleeve" is one of the ways in which Tchaikovsky's six unapologetically emotional symphonies are belittled. This is one of those cases where the public has gotten it righter than the belittlers -- way righter. One of the fascinations of Tchaikovsky's symphonies, in fact, is that no two of them resemble each other. The composer invented a new model each time out. But even in the most extroverted and dynamic of them, the Fourth, the element of "soul" threads its way in. Here's the tempestuous finale:

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36:
iv. Finale: Allegro con fuoco


Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, David Zinman, cond. Telarc, recorded Nov. 20-25, 1989

Surely the most surprising finale, and possibly the most surprising movement in a Tchaikovsky symphony, is the last movement of the last of them, the haunting finale of the Pathétique. This is a symphony that begins in the brooding depths of the orchestra, in time disgorging one of the composer's most famous, most throbbing melodies, then continues with a "slow" movement that's really an "allegro" and an imposing march movement that could pass for the finale of most symphonies. But Tchaikovsky had in mind a more anguished envoi.

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 (Pathétique):
iv. Finale: Adagio lamentoso; Andante


Boston Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Monteux, cond. RCA/BMG, recorded Jan. 26, 1955

I suppose it's possible that Mahler would have arrived independently at the idea of concluding his most monumental symphony, the Third, with an elegiac parting movement. But in my mind there's no question that in his mind this remarkable precedent of Tchaikovsky was playing in the background.


SYMPHONIC BONUSES

I don't mean to suggest that we've done anything like justice to these great symphonies. This is a pretty backwards way of looking at works that are, after all, dominated by enormous (20-minute-ish) opening movements, and feature pretty remarkable middle ones too. (Hey, how about that soulful yet perky little song that slips in after the massive first movement of the Fourth, or the plucked-strings scherzo that follows?) In compensation, and in the spirit of holiday cheer, here are the complete symphonies.

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36:
i. Andante sostenuto; Moderato con anima; Moderato assai, quasi andante; Allegro vivo
ii. Andante in modo di canzone
iii. Scherzo: Pizzicato ostinato; Allegro
iv. Finale: Allegro con fuoco


London Symphony Orchestra, George Szell, cond. Decca, recorded September 1962

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 (Pathétique):
i. Adagio; Allegro non troppo
ii. Allegro con grazia
ii. Allegro molto vivace
iv. Finale: Adagio lamentoso; Andante


London Symphony Orchestra, Igor Markevitch, cond. Philips, recorded January 1962


SUNDAY CLASSICS POSTS

Here is the not-entirely-up-to-date list.
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4 Comments:

At 3:35 PM, Anonymous Balakirev said...

I heard that Lisitsian "Ya vas lyubyu" first when George Jellinek broadcast it on WQXR back in the mid 1970s, and was astonished. I rushed down to The Four Continents Bookstore and bought the excerpts that had the aria on LP (probably like you), and only got the full thing later on LP, and very recently, on CD--Preiser 90470. Can't say I'm a big fan of Nelepp or Ivanov, but Melik-Pashayev was a sensitive conductor, and nobody has ever touched Lisitsian, in my opinion, in Yeletsky.

You have Lisitsian in Ombra mai fu...?

 
At 8:04 PM, Blogger KenInNY said...

Oh, absolutely. I still have the old domestic MK issue of the Melodiya Lisitsian song recital it was part of, and yes, the "Ombra mai fu" is gangbusters.

I was clued in to PL by Conrad L. Osborne in his HIGH FIDELITY reviews. (CLO knew his records, and made a point of catching his Met Amonasro and the NY recital he gave while he was here.) If my memory serves correctly, in his review of the Khaikin/Melodiya Queen of Spades, he had to break the news that, nice a job as the then-young Yuri Mazurok did as Yeletsky -- and that was certainly a fine voice -- he was, as you say, no Lisitsian.

I actually had the complete Queen of Spades before that warmed-over aria recital. As I'm sure you remember, in those days it was all the luck of the draw as to what happened to turn up at Four Continent, which in turn was based on the utterly incomprehensible decisions of bored, and probably music-hating, bureaucrats in Moscow. (Adding to the confusion, on my first visits to San Francisco and Los Angeles, I found my way to a store in each that had all sorts of Melodiya LPs I'd never seen at Four Continent.) When I heard the editing job the Melodiya did with the Yeletsky excerpt on that aria LP, I hit the ceiling.

Thanks again for supplying the clip, B! I really do hope some readers will take advantage of the opportunity to listen to the Chernov and Lisitsian performances side by side.

Cheers,
Ken

 
At 8:08 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Would be interested to know your favorite performance of the Serenade for Strings, too.

 
At 8:35 PM, Blogger KenInNY said...

The Tchaikovsky Serenade is one of those pieces that's hard to miss the point of, and so isn't often done badly, but at the same time isn't easy to perform as dazzlingly as you know it can and ought to be performed.

The recording that pops to mind for me, as a Philadelphia-strings partisan, is the old Ormandy-Philadelphia-Columbia (this is also music that was right up Ormandy's alley), which Sony has issued in scads of CD couplings. (I just foolishly passed up a $1.99 used copy of the disc on which it fills out Ormandy's Tchaikovsky Fifth Symphony, because I couldn't remember whether I had the CD -- I didn't.)

I have fond memories of the Argo version by Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields (now available on an Australian Decca CD with the Dvorak Serenade for Strings and Grieg Holberg Suite). There was also a later Marriner-Academy version for Philips.

Since this isn't a work that I collect compulsively, I'm sure there have been lots of perfectly decent more recent recordings that I haven't heard. Maybe somebody out there has some thoughts.

Ken

 

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