Bernstein

  • Review: Sharon Cam American Classics for Clarinet

     

    American Classics: Music for Clarinet by Bernstein, Copland, Gershwin, Gould, and Shaw
    Sharon Kam, clarinet; London Symphony Orchestra/Gregor Buhl
    Teldec 8573-88482-2
    Total Time:  61:20
    Recording:   ****/****
    Performance: ****/****

     

    Sharon Kam’s 2002 release of American music for clarinet features some familiar and some less familiar works.  Three of the pieces recorded here were all commissions from Benny Goodman, the great swing jazz clarinetist, who had begun appearing in classical venues in the late 1940s and 1950s.  The find here is a recording of a concerto by Artie Shaw which is paired off with several arrangements of Gershwin songs.

    The disc opens with Aaron Copland’s Concerto for Clarinet (1947/48).  Copland had made his name in the 1920s with highly-angular works with jazz rhythms and by the 1940s had shifted into the style that most listeners recognize.  Often referred to as “Americana,” the music with its open intervals which Copland “discovered” to paint a picture of the open spaces of American landscapes would be explored fully in a series of ballets in the 1940s.  He had also begun trying his hand at film scoring and the concerto is interesting because these three areas of composition and style some together in this work.  The piece begins with a slow waltz given a rather languishing tempo here that is like a summer day with that humid haze in the air.  A cadenza separates this from the more angular jazzy rhythms of the “Rather Fast” concluding section.  Copland’s scoring for strings, harp and piano may seem like an odd choice for a “jazz” concerto, but this is really more a work written for a great clarinetist who happened to play jazz and Copland’s clarinet lines are not that far removed from his melodic style.   Kam’s performance feels a bit slow at first but this is part of the restraint and the way she allows the music to unfold where proper bursts of energy work well.  In comparison with some favorite recordings of the work (by Richard Stoltzman, Goodman, and a fine recent release by David Singer reviewed here) the performance falls overall on the faster side.  Especially fun to hear are the shifts in tempo in the final movement.  Overall this is a fine performance showing off Kam’s skill and warm depth of tone.  The biggest problem is that Teldec decided to lump the whole work as a single track—labels still have not quite figured out if they should track this in 1, 2, or 3 segments evidently.  But this is a minor quibble.

    Leonard Bernstein’s Prelude, Fugue and Riffs (1949) had a circuitous route to its final performance with Goodman.  Bernstein intended the work for Woody Herrman’s big band, but the group disbanded before they ever played it.  Next, he tried sticking it in as a ballet sequence in the musical Wonderful Town but that got dropped as well.  Finally, he was able to have it performed on one of his TV programs and he subsequently recorded it with Goodman—the recording considered a classic.  The piece is in that jazzy style Bernstein was exploring in his New York City musicals and West Coast jazz influences.  There is a little Stravinsky thrown in for good measure as well.  The work tends to play like one big improvisational number with the clarinet winding its way through the piece.  Whenever one hears the piece, it is hard not to wonder what Herrman’s band might have made of the thing.  Still it makes for some exciting listening.  The LSO pulls in a fine group of saxophonists who get to show off their stuff.  The brass do a fine job as well and the piece swings when it needs to with Kam’s clarinet recorded in such a way that it blends very well with the ensemble.  Buhl’s tempi here are quite good overall.  This will not supplant Goodman’s recording or even Stoltzman (which is coupled with concerti by Corigliano and Copland on RCA).

    The less recorded Derivations for Clarinet (1955/rev. 1965) by Morton Gould is for wind band and soloist.  Gould’s style was a combination of Copland, Roy Harris, and Ferde Grofe (especially in his orchestration).  The mix of American folk song and shifts of harmonic blocks with a little romanticism made many of Gould’s works fall into what today is referred to as “pops” music.  But this is an oversimplification.  Gould’s music is quite communicative and accessible and it is a shame it is not more popular these days.  The present work is along the lines of more serious pieces that mix the classical, folk, and popular (in this case jazz) together.  The four-movement work has a quick opening and brilliant closing movement with two “form” pieces from popular music in its center.  The second movement, “Contrapuntal Blues,” has a spun out melodic idea within a blues formula and is followed by a “Rag.”  The clarity of the lines in this recording are fascinating to hear.  The approach seems to find musical connections between the Bernstein and Copland styles in the piece that are made pointedly in the performance.  Kam’s performance is again rich and warm.

    Artie Shaw’s Concerto for Clarinet (1940) actually comes from the film Second Chorus.  Shaw recorded the piece later with his own band.  Shaw’s little piece is really a swing band number in every sense with thematic ideas and improvisational cadenzas.  Sometimes the clarinet line has an almost Klezmer quality to it which is a bit interesting.  This is a welcome addition to the catalog and Kam’s style is perfect for this piece in particular with its concluding cadenza one of the disc’s highlights.

    The album concludes with four arrangements (one by Buhl, and three by composer John Cameron) of Gershwin songs.  They are all fine examples of good encore material and they serve their purpose well here by helping to fill out this album of jazz-influenced concert pieces for clarinet, a bit over lush at times but no less beautiful and well-played.

    Though there are plenty of recordings of the Copland, it is the collection of interesting works here that makes this disc worthy of one’s attention.  The London Symphony “jazz” band if you will acquits themselves quite well.  The recording needs perhaps to be just a bit drier stylistically for these pieces, but the warm recording of the Copland really captures the essence of that work well.  As things get a bit more jazzy towards the end the balance continues to be well-detailed.

  • Review: Chicago SO & Barenboim

     

    Gershwin/Bernstein/Ravel/Wagner
    Chicago Symphony Orchestra/Daniel Barenboim
    Warner Classics & Jazz 2564 69816-5
    Total Time:  66:36
    Recording:   ****/****
    Performance: ****/****

     

    The Chicago Symphony Orchestra has one of the best discographies of any orchestra due in large part to its recorded history with the RCA label under Fritz Reiner.  The orchestra’s ability to capture the world’s best conductors has meant that it has plenty of duplication in its recorded catalogue to demonstrate how its sound can be shaped by different conductors.  Some may find it surprising that of the works represented here the Gershwin has only been recorded only once before with James Levine; the Bernstein appears to be the orchestra’s first recording.  They are coupled here with reissued performances of the Ravel and Wagner from earlier releases.

    Barenboim’s performance of Gershwin’s Cuban Overture may be one of the longest on record timing in at 11:11.  Intriguingly the music only feels a bit too slow near the beginning of the piece and moves more musically as a result into its slower central section.  The orchestra plays a bit more crisply which ends up giving the music the impression that is moving along at a quicker pace.  Barenboim also shapes the work a bit allowing it to grow in intensity over time the way Leonard Slatkin did in his classic St. Louis Symphony recording.  You cannot fault the performance by the CSO which is simply gorgeous where it needs to be and excitingly spot-on rhythmically when it counts.

    Leonard Bernstein’s West Side Story Symphonic Dances has had plenty of great recordings and this is a fine one.  It too illustrates the orchestra’s richness and clarity of rhythm.  Barenboim’s tempos though here too feel a bit on the slow side though within the context of this performance are well-shaped overall and taken on their own make good sense.  It helps that the recording itself places the orchestra well in the sound picture.  Another thing in this disc’s benefit is that the individual movements of the dances are given their own track access.  Overall, Barenboim’s fast tempos tend to be fairly traditional and spot on while the slower sections are slightly slower than one normally hears but the music never seems to drag somehow and the performance is quite engaging with the sort of attention to orchestral detail that is often glossed over in this work.  Also of interest is that Barenboim does not appear to simply beat time, instead he helps shape and interpret the music creating a more intimate overall result that is not simply trying to match Bernstein’s own interpretation.  Some will find this quite valid and it is definitely pulled off here quite well.

    If you missed the earlier release of the Ravel Daphnis et Chloe Suite No. 2 and the music from Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde that reappear here they will make interesting bedfellows to the American pieces that comprise the first half of the disc.  Still these are critically acclaimed performances that help make the disc a great testament to the musicality of its current conductor.  Overall this is a great demonstration disc with great sound quality that will be perfect for fans of the orchestra.  The repertoire is practically of the warhorse variety though at least these performances should stand up to repeated listening.