
As Wolfgang Sandner observes in this album’s liner notes, for Bartók
the music of Hungary’s peasants “was the source of a radical new musical
system, not material for reverting to a nostalgic transfiguration of
the original sounds.” In light of this, we might reckon his Romanian Folk Dances of
1917 not as an archival storehouse but, more like Estonian composer
Veljo Tormis’s choral arrangements, as an experiment made fresh by
extant impulses. While for me the reference recording by Midori and
Robert McDonald (1992, Sony Classical) gets to the core of the music in
ways I’ve not since heard, the Stuttgarters’ soaring performance of this
1937 arrangement for string orchestra by Arthur Willner articulates the
orbits of its moons with surprising precision. A delicate piece of
nevertheless sweeping proportions, it moves by a hand unseen. The solo
violin stands out like a red rose among a field of black, its changes
organic, even a touch mournful, in the present setting. As the mosaic
evolves, it gives light to the translucent cells of its becoming. The
flute-like strings in the enlivening finale give us reason to rejoice in
the shadows.
So, too, does the Divertimento. Composed 1939 in dedication
to Paul Sacher (who commissioned the work) and the Basler
Kammerorchester, it achieves novel balance of spiritedness and restraint
under Davies’s direction. Its unmistakable beginning lures with its
insistent rhythm but would just as soon fragment into multiple galaxies
of melodic thought. There is a smoothness of execution in the tutti
passages and a paper-thin delicacy to the solo strings. While one might
expect that energy to be sustained, it waxes and wanes in a most
natural, thought-out-loud sort of way that lends especial insight into
Bartók’s compositional process. The second movement proceeds slowly at
first, but then, with the coming of dawn, stretches its gravity. The
lower and higher strings forge an implicit harmony, an acknowledgment of
the invisible forces connecting them both. The contrast between double
basses and violins is one not of tone but of purpose: the lowers an
unstable fundament, the uppers a firmament in turmoil. This chaos they
share as if it were blood. The final movement returns the promise of
that dance with wit. There are, of course, intensely lyrical and
slow-moving parts, with the violin carving surface relief, but always
returning with that whirlwind of fire.
In the wake of this dynamism, selections from Bartók’s 27 Two- and Three-Part Choruses (1935-41)
come as something of a breather. They are not adaptations of folksongs,
but were composed in such a style at the behest of Zoltán Kodály. With
evocative titles like “Wandering,” “Bread-baking,” and “Jeering,” each
is a vignette of imagined life. A snare drum pops its way through the
choral textures, by turns martial and lyrical, adding colors of interest
throughout. And while these pieces hardly hold a candle to his a
capella choruses (the orchestral writing feels at points superfluous),
they provide welcome contrast to the veils that precede it with gift of
vision.
Many thanks and regards from The Netherlands.
ResponderEliminarVeel dank en groeten uit Nederland.
thank you, looks interesting. -a.v.
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