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Steven Schwartz <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 3 Jan 1999 22:02:40 -0600
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                Romantic Chamber Music
 Quintets

* Brahms: Piano Quintet in f, op. 34
* Schubert: "Trout" Quintet, op. 114

Budapest String Quartet (Roismann, Ortenberg, Kroyt, Schneider),
Moleux (bass), Szell (piano)
Bridge 9062

Summary for the Busy Executive: Miraculously right.

Two performances from the Library of Congress chamber music series of
the middle 1940s.  A Szell fanatic, I bought the disc because it featured
Szell in a rare chamber recording.  I grew up in Cleveland during the Szell
years.  I know all his commercial stereo records.  I know of no better
post-war conductor, although I have of course heard others as good in their
own way.  In fact, most of my prejudices about music and performance to
some extent derive from Szell's practice.  After I left Cleveland, I came
under other influences, but I was always struck more by the fundamental
similarities of these new lessons to what Szell had already taught me -
from guides like Furtwaengler, Koussevitzky, and Mengelberg - than by the
differences.  So take what follows with this in mind.

For some reason, other conductors, far inferior to Szell, have greater
reputations.  Of the U.S.  Big Five orchestras, only Reiner's Chicago
played in the same league as Szell's Cleveland.  Everyone acknowledged the
orchestra's precision, but of course precision doesn't suffice.  If Szell
offered only that, I wouldn't care either, but, fortunately, he had other
virtues.  The precision served and heightened the music.  The unanimity of
attack strengthened rhythmic excitement - Szell's music-making crackled -
without impairing the singing quality of the line, and, of course, it's
nice to hear what a composer actually wrote.  For example, in Szell's
recording at the opening measures of Strauss's Tod und Verklaerung, the
correct irregular rhythm - eighth, triplet rest, triplet eighth, triplet
eighth tied to eighth; as opposed to eighth tied to eighth or triplet
eighth tied to triplet eighth, as in just about every other recording - is
clearly articulated for once.  The orchestral texture of everything Szell
conducted was unbelievably clear, aided again by razor-sharp rhythm and by
each orchestra player aware of his proper strength in the ensemble.  In
comparison, most others' Wagners and Mahlers and Strausses sounded stodgy
as Margaret Dumont droning on about Culture.  I can't think of a greater
Wagner conductor on record, and it is to the Met's discredit that from the
Bing era on (marked by the mindless and the second-rate - which, by the
way, characterizes the Met to this day), Szell never got to conduct there.

Szell had more subtle virtues as well, including an intense and flexible
singing line which accommodated the smallest shifts of rubato and dynamics.
One felt the music constantly moving forward, even as one felt microscopic
hesitancies and pushes.  Perhaps he got it from Mengelberg, just as he got
his standards of precise execution from Toscanini.  Perhaps he always had
it.  Right now, very few conductors seem to practice this particular art:
Dohnanyi, Rattle, Kleiber, Eschenbach, and, among younger conductors,
Welser-Moest, Paul, and Nagano. Almost imperceptibly, the line of
music changed under Szell's baton.  It caught the listener from moment to
moment.  At the same time, like his precision, Szell's line served larger
ends.  Szell's musical mind was architectural: rigorously intellectual,
historical, and poetic at the same time.  His interpretations showed an
architect's foresight, always making the musical structure palpable, even
sensuous - all sculpted by the musical line.  With conductors "in the
moment" like Barbirolli or Bernstein, you sometimes ran out of room at the
extremes of tempo and dynamics.  The slow pulse broke down and the music
temporarily died.  The quick pulse derailed.  If the music called for
louder or softer, such a conductor sometimes had nowhere to go.  Szell
always seemed to know where he was and where he had to get to, which
bespoke meticulous preparation.  Many, I believe, mistook this care for
emotional coldness.  I confess I have no idea what they're talking about.
He was elegant, but never cold.  Yet even many of Szell's critics
acknowledged his excellence in Strauss, Wagner, and Tchaikovsky - none
of these composers normally regarded as unemotional.

With Szell, you almost never got the feeling of "interpretation,"
except in the rare cases when he failed - as in the first movement of
his Hindemith Symphonic Metamorphoses recording.  Of a Szell performance,
I usually thought, "The music probably sounded this way in the composer's
head." After all, Szell began as a composer himself.  Although he wrote
neo-Straussian pieces of great refinement - indeed, far better-written
technically than any Strauss I know - he realized that the important thing
separating his work from Strauss's was not refinement, but genius, and it
was all on Strauss's side.  Failing his own standards for composition, he
devoted himself to the work of others.  He tried for the impossible - to
present the work as close as he could to the composer's imaginary ideal.
He had no "sound" as such.  His Mozart subtly differed from his Haydn (he
excelled in both), and his Classicals differed from his early, middle, and
late Romantics.  Yet, he was no literalist.  For example, he performed the
Schumann symphonies in his own orchestration, not to imprint himself on
the music, but to clarify the musical matter.  He studied for many years
the conditions of the symphonies' first performances and concluded that
Schumann had tried to compensate for weak strings in the Dresden orchestra.
Szell took a great deal of care to keep his changes to a minimum and close
to the style of Schumann's successful original orchestrations, like the
Piano Concerto.  Many scholars and critics urged him to publish his
editions, but he refused, feeling that each conductor must find his own
way.

Szell's main strength lay in the Central European repertory, Classic and
Romantic periods: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schumann, Mendelssohn, Brahms,
Wagner, Grieg, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky, Smetana, Dvorak, and Sibelius -
in other words, Bruckner and Mahler excepted.  I don't believe he was
particularly sympathetic to Bruckner, while his relationship to Mahler's
music showed great ambiguity.  The Mahler he did was superb, but one knew
he really was no Mahlerite - that there were works he never would conduct.
His French repertoire was variable, although he did magnificently with
Ravel.  His main limitation, as far as I'm concerned, was his lack of
affinity for modern music.  He recognized it, but he programmed it for
guest conductors.  He felt he didn't understand most of it, and if he
couldn't present it in its best possible light, he preferred to leave it to
others.  Nevertheless, he performed more twentieth-century music than most
think and always at his best.  Prokofiev became a favorite.  He championed
Walton at a time when that composer's reputation had gone into decline.
His performance and recording of the Symphony No. 2 turned around at least
some of the critics who had panned it at its premiere, and he commissioned
the late masterpieces of the Partita and the Variations on a Theme by
Hindemith.  He commissioned and performed Dutilleux, Mennin, the Polish
serialist Tadeusz Baird, and Barber.  His recording of the Barber Piano
Concerto burns down the barn.  He continually applied himself.  He had
confessed that the reason he had never performed Stravinsky's Le Sacre
du printemps was because for a long time he couldn't handle the meters.
Yet, about fifty years after that work's premiere, he led a blazing live
performance in Severance Hall - my first exposure to the work in concert.
I remember the rhythms going through my body, snapping my head back, long,
gradual crescendos tightening the screws of tension, the orchestra visually
overwhelming as well, like a giant, pulsating, fantastic engine.  If
recorded (and after a certain point, every Cleveland Orchestra concert
was), it's never appeared commercially, more's the pity.

Several times, Szell spelled out his orchestral ideal - basically,
super chamber music, the same unanimity of mind and purpose from great
individual players expanded from a duo to a quartet to an octet to a
symphony.  He constantly ran toward that goal even as he knew he couldn't
reach it.  Thus, how he does in chamber music becomes an especially
interesting question.  Here, he plays with the Budapest String Quartet.
I've heard string players grumble about this group - their intonation,
articulation, and so on - but for me they play like magicians.  Their
performances overflow with magical moments.  If I prefer overall the old
Amadeus or Quartetto Italiano, I have to admit that neither group gives me
the quite unearthly beauty of the Budapest in, say, the first movement of
Schubert's C-major Quintet.  If I admire the sheer pianism of, say, Pollini
over Schnabel or Cortot, the latter nevertheless call forth a response from
deeper caverns of my psyche.  To me, the Budapest epitomizes the mystique
of European musical "soul," particularly in German repertoire -
superficially odd, since I believe every one of them came from either
Russia or the Ukraine, certainly not from Buda or Pest.

The Brahms Piano Quintet underwent a complicated history.  Originally a
string quintet, it caused the composer to worry that a homogeneous sound
of a few strings couldn't project some of the ideas forcefully enough.
Brahms turned it into a sonata for two pianos, which fared badly at its
first performance.  Clara Schumann advised the composer that, in effect,
he needed greater contrast and suggested a revision for full orchestra.
Brahms followed the spirit rather than the letter of the recommendation and
came up with the Piano Quintet.  The piano could provide power and, against
the strings, contrast and additional color.  The two-piano sonata still
survives as op. 34a.  Unfortunately - considering that Brahms's string
quintets stand among his greatest chamber works - the string quintet
version of this piano quintet has disappeared.  Brahms acolyte, Donald
Tovey called the final version "powerfully tragic," "the climax of Brahms's
first maturity ...  the most sonorous of all works for pianoforte and
strings, and yet the most lightly scored." The first movement in particular
represents Brahms at his most concentrated.  The development remains
remarkably free of the sequential writing that sometimes creeps into other
Brahms pieces, probably just to fill out the form.  The movement rises from
mainly two ideas: the opening arpeggiated motive and a falling semitone,
the latter too short really to qualify as a full-fledged idea.  But what
changes he works on them both!  The declamatory arpeggio immediately
generates the piano's rapid accompaniment.  The falling semitone births
a litter of great tunes.  Many have criticized the slow movement as a
let-down after the first - in Phillip Ramey's phrase, "a probable
miscalculation ....  salon music that has been injected into an otherwise
bold and distinctive score." I agree with Clara: "How rapturously it sings
and rings from beginning to end!  I keep on beginning it over again, and
wished it would never stop." Tovey believes the scherzo based on the
corresponding movement in the Beethoven fifth symphony - similar rhythmic
and harmonic shifts - but to me the emotion expressed belongs to Brahms
alone - less classically direct than Beethoven, more psychologically
complex.  An urgent pulse beats nervously all through, superbly caught
by the performers, without overstatement.  The ambitious finale is a
sonata-rondo - that is, development takes the place of the second rondo
episode so that we have the form ABA - development - ABA.  Brahms puts some
of his most inspired music in that development as well as into an intensely
quiet, highly chromatic prelude - almost like an organ prelude - which
leads to the sonata-rondo proper.  I hear a passage like this and wonder
how so perceptive a critic as Shaw could have found Brahms conventional and
dull, even though I myself once thought the same.

I confess that I've never completely warmed up to Schubert's "Trout"
Quintet (I'm not even fond of the song), but mainly, I suspect, because of
the comparison to his magnificent "Cello" Quintet in C - perhaps my single
favorite chamber work.  Still, I'm not really playing fair.  The two works
differ greatly in intent, it seems to me.  The "Cello" Quintet sounds like
Schubert communing with the deepest part of himself, writing for art alone,
while the "Trout" feels more "sociable." It's just the sort of piece one
devotes weekends to working up with a bunch of close musical friends.
The first movement especially exudes conviviality, perhaps even
rambunctiousness at times.  The second reminds me a lot of some of the more
lyrical Rosamunde music - a meditative singing to which Schubert alone has
the secret.  The scherzo bounds like a puppy crazy with happiness and also
has a delicacy that points to Mendelssohn's scherzi.  My least favorite
movement, the variations on "Die Forelle," gets a tremendous performance
here which made me completely forget the dippiness of the basic material,
this despite some intonation problems from the strings.  Indeed, some of
the trills from the first violin reminded me of the chirps from a cellular
phone.  Nevertheless, under these performers, it becomes a hymn to benign,
Romantic nature - the flashing brook, the gentle wind, the warm sun.  In
the finale, ensemble breaks down a bit, with the string attack going soft
and mushy here and there.  But the Budapest and Szell manage to pull
everything together in time for the recap, and the diverse musical strands
magically find their light, right place.

Given the number and weight of all the expectations riding on this music,
we must admit the tremendous difficulty of satisfying them.  Technically,
I've heard better performances than what the Budapest gives here, but it
doesn't matter.  First, the performers span tremendous architectural
lengths.  Whole movements seem to go by in a single breath, almost
imperceptibly into the next - the first into the second, the third into
the fourth.  The Budapest and Szell - so often thought of as different
kinds of musicians, and rightly so - nevertheless have in common the long
line, which turns out not only sufficient but the main engine of the
performance.  The Budapest is at its most remarkable in the quiet passages,
with breathtaking pianos and pianissimos.  Szell - a student of Serkin's
teacher, Richard Robert - shares much with Serkin, including an effacement
of "personality" in service of the score and crystalline textures.  This
lies as far from the star turn as one can get.  Often, he seems to play at
the softest dynamic possible, and yet you hear everything in the score.
Each note seems a jewel all by itself and yet part of a string that
stretches almost past sight.  The overall character of the performances
strikes me as less overtly dramatic, especially in the Brahms, than in
many I've heard, but somehow these satisfy me more.  They have a sense
of mesure, of proportion, appropriateness, without wallow or emotional
slop and treacle.  The piano runs in the accompaniment of the "Trout"'s
variations movement, for example, come off without the impression of
loopiness or sentimentality, for once, which means, I think, that the
performers have found its elusive interpretive key.

The sound, of course, remains glorious 1940s mono, constricted in the high
frequencies.  Surfaces, however, are for the most part clean, with the
exception of portions of the Schubert, where some noise does intrude.

Steve Schwartz

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