sun 01/12/2024

Classical CDs Weekly: Beethoven, Méhul, Mozart, Schubert | reviews, news & interviews

Classical CDs Weekly: Beethoven, Méhul, Mozart, Schubert

Classical CDs Weekly: Beethoven, Méhul, Mozart, Schubert

Revolutionary symphonies and a much-loved requiem, plus new translations of German lieder

Momentous Méhul: Christoph Koenig conducts the Solistes Européens Luxembourg

 

Mehul&BeethovenBeethoven: Symphony No 3, Méhul: Symphony No 1 Solistes Européens Luxembourg/Christoph König (Rubicon)

Étienne-Nicolas Méhul was one of revolutionary France’s key musicans. He was commissioned by Napoleon to write his Chant national du 14 juillet 1800, the work serving for a time as an unofficial national anthem. Best remembered as an operatic composer, he also left behind five symphonies. This Symphony in G minor, dating from 1808, is a fascinating discovery. Dripping with angst, it recalls Haydn's stormier symphonies and has a finale with a motif sounding uncannily like Beethoven’s contemporaneous 5th Symphony. The two composers knew each other, though the similarity is probably just coincidence. Repeated listenings suggest why Méhul’s symphony isn't well known: whilst the tunes are striking, and the energy infectious, there just aren't enough surprises. Plus, a glimpse at the score (it's downloadable on the IMSLP website) confirms that Méhul's orchestration is more workmanlike than inspired. Still, it gets a phenomenal performance here from Christoph König’s Solistes Européens Luxembourg, the playing full of fire.

Maybe if the apt coupling wasn't Beethoven’s Eroica, you wouldn't notice Méhul’s shortcomings. This music is audibly in a different league, in terms of ambition, technique and scoring. König's reading is predictably exciting, though the first movement’s crashing, dissonant chords don't shock as they should. Still, the same movement's huge coda is glorious, followed by a taut funeral march. Horns are on fine form in the Scherzo, and Beethoven’s baggy finale doesn't sprawl. An entertaining disc – recorded, oddly, as long ago as 2011-2012. Can the same team give us more Méhul, please?

Jacobs' Dutron's Sussmayr's Mozart's RequiemMozart: Requiem (Süssmayr edition, revised by Pierre-Henri Dutron) Soloists, RIAS Kammerchor, Freiburger Barockorchester/René Jacobs (Harmonia Mundi)

Deryck Cooke’s edition of Mahler’s 10th Symphony is still off limits to some conductors who presumably wouldn’t blanch at tackling the best-known edition of Mozart’s Requiem, despite it containing an alarming amount of material not actually by Mozart. His widow Constanze gave the fragmentary manuscript to Franz Xavier Süssmayr, a Salieri pupil who completed the work within weeks, Constanze never revealing quite what she’d given him. René Jacobs’ new disc of the work uses a realisation by the young French composer Pierre-Henri Dutron, who based his work on what Süssmayr published. This isn't a radical recomposition but “an attempt to improve the movements composed by Süssmayr…”, the orchestration revised to make his additions closer to Mozart.

If you’re already feeling confused, avoid the visually spectacular flowchart in the booklet, a noble but baffling attempt to show how much in percentage terms of which bit was written by who. This is a minor gripe: as a performance, this Mozart Requiem is sublime: magnificently sung and deftly accompanied. If you heard this disc blind, you'd probably notice the clearer, leaner textures and bright choral sound, though both must be due in part to Jacobs’ use of period forces. The handful of swifter movements crackle with theatrical electricity: the “Confutatis” and “Dies Irae” a case in point, and there's a melting trombone solo in the “Tuba mirum”, duetting sweetly with baritone Johannes Weisser. Jacobs’ four soloists are all outstanding, soprano Sophie Karthäuser glorious in  the brief “Benedictus”. It flows, and wonderfully so. An outstanding disc, handsomely packaged and well-annotated.

Schubert's Winter JourneySchubert: Winter Journey Roderick Williams (baritone), Christopher Glynn (piano) (Signum Classics)

No one bats an eyelid when ENO or Opera North stages opera in translation (though, increasingly, new productions of standard repertoire tend to be in the original language, with surtitles). Odd that English recorded accounts of lieder are so thin on the ground. Here, Roderick Williams sings Jeremy Sams’ new translation of Winterreise. It's exceptionally effective, and mandatory listening if, like me, you're not a fluent German speaker. Sams describes the process in entertaining terms in the booklet, a quest to find “what English text would have led to that music… like a devilish game of four-dimensional chess.” What can be an abstract series of pleasant sounds emitted by a well fed bloke in a dinner jacket becomes an accessible sequence of very singable songs. It helps that Williams is doing said singing: fulsome and parched in tone by turns, and always inhabiting the texts. I began to well up near the close of “Good Night”, Schubert's shift to the major unbearably poignant.

Think of this as the 1827 equivalent of a concept album. Williams and his superb pianist Christopher Glynn trace Schubert and Müller’s downbeat sequence with unerring sensitivity. “The Hurdy Gurdy Man” provides a suitably bleak coda. All good, with full texts and good notes. The curious should also investigate vocalist Nataša Mirković’s devastatingly original account of the cycle, with genuine hurdy gurdy accompaniment.

Add comment

The future of Arts Journalism

 

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters