Sheherazade as chamber music? Reduced to four members?
Somewhere up there, Leopold Stokowski, the man who made this music a
big-orchestra showpiece, is having a fit – especially since this
recording is so successful in terms of the transcription and performance
by the Zurich Ensemble. The four musicians – violin, piano, cello and
clarinet – have the music in their souls and, through a combination of
cunning and artistic will power, have made the piece their own.
The small-might-be-better trend was also manifested over the summer
with Ensemble Festivo playing Schumann’s Fourth Symphony with 10
instruments – somewhat convincingly but not nearly on the level of this
group, whose transcription by Florian Noack and Benjamin Engeli is full
of shrewd insights that save their endeavour from palm-court kitsch and
give the music a greater sense of dramatic narrative. The solo violin
(beautifully played by Kamilla Schatz) is pretty much intact, though the
violin joins in with the cello and piano to create rhythmic momentum
when necessary. Orchestral strings are replaced by piano, which also
covers the harp arpeggios. The clarinet creates a primary voice in the
texture when the solo violin is otherwise occupied. Of course,
limitations are to be expected. With less sound to work with, grand rubatos
aren’t possible. Also, the group practises certain sleights of hand
with spatial effects that are possible in the recording studio. If this
four-person group isn’t about to summon an imposing Cinemascopic span of
sound, why can’t depth of field replace lost grandeur?
Sheherazade is framed by lesser-known works: a suite of incidental music by Sergei Bortkiewicz (1877-1955) for A Thousand and One Nights
(pleasant enough but incidental) and Khachaturian’s Trio for clarinet,
violin and piano, a 1934 piece that’s a bit of a find, full of
attractive ideas that never fall back on the animal energy of his
better-known works. (David Patrick Stearns / Gramophone)
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