
MOZART: Symphony No. 33 in B-flat, K319. Symphony No. 28 in C,
K200. Overture to The Marriage of Figaro. Symphony No. 35 in D, K385 "Haffner." Symphony
No. 39 in E-flat, K543 (1947 mono & 1960 stereo). Symphony No. 40 in
g, K550 (1955 mono & 1967 stereo). Symphony No. 41 in C, K551 "Jupiter" (1955
mono & 1963 stereo). Overture to The Impressario, K486. Divertimento
in D for flute, oboe, bassoon, 4 horns and orchestra, K131. Sinfonia Concertante
in E-flat for violin, viola, and orchestra, K364 (320d). Exsultate, jubilate,
K165 (158a). Serenade in G, K525 "Eine kleine Nachtmusik." Serenade
in D, K320 "Posthorn." Divertimento in D, K334 (320b). Requiem: "Lacrimosa," K626.
Minuet in C, K409 (383f) (1946 mono). Clarinet Concerto in A, K622. Piano
Concerto No. 25 in C, K503. Violin Sonata in F, K376 (374d). Violin Sonata
in G, K301 (293a). Violin Sonata in e, K304 (300c). Violin Sonata in C,
K296. Piano Quartet in g, K478 (1946 mono). Piano Quartet in E-flat, K.493
(1946 mono).
Maurice Sharp (flute); Marc Lifschey (oboe); George Goslee (bassoon); Myron
Bloom, Roy Waas, Martin Morris, Emani Angelucci (french horn); Rafael Druian
(violin); Abraham Skernick (viola); Judith Raskin (soprano); Robert Marcellus
(clarinet); Leon Fleisher (piano); George Szell (piano); members of the
Budapest String Quartet (Joseph Roisman, violin; Boris Kroyt, viola; Mischa
Schneider, cello); The Cleveland Orchestra & Chorus/George Szell, Robert
Shaw, Erich Leinsdorf, Louis Lane.
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It's about time. George Szell is one of the few major conductors of the
Twentieth Century who doesn't have his own society. Even in his lifetime,
he seemed more like a well-kept secret among cognoscenti (and Clevelanders),
despite a very nice career. For my money and so far as one can reasonably
assert such a thing, he was the interpreter for standard, German and
Central European repertory, the real deal as opposed to Karajan, a
conductor manqué.
I see many reasons for this relative neglect, some of them having to
do with Szell's intimidating personality, others having to do with
interpretive
fashion.
As to the first, Szell made enemies. After a certain point, he had no
career in opera because Rudolf Bing (excuse me, Sir Rudolf Bing), a musical
Philistine
single-handedly responsible for the artistic decline of the Met and Covent
Garden but nevertheless powerful in the operatic world, hated his guts.
I'm sure Szell reciprocated. Because of Bing, the Met kept out the great
Wagnerian of his generation. Those lucky enough to have seen Szell's
Wagner in the Forties talked and wrote about it for years afterwards.
Szell also
had a tongue. Of a German conductor in post-war trouble because of his
activities during the Third Reich, Szell remarked, "A Nazi? He was
never a Nazi. Only a prostitute." The wit could also turn against
himself. After a story on him appeared in Time, he called his cronies and
crowed, "It's official! I'm a bastard."
As to the second, we can usefully divide interpretive approaches in two:
literalist and subjective, Apollonian vs. Dionysian. The categories aren't
really distinct, like paint chips, but blur into one another along a
spectrum. I would call a conductor like Stokowski "subjective" even though
he approached a score with the idea of being true to the composer's spirit,
if not to the letter: what Bach would have done, had he only known the
instruments. This tradition goes back at least to the latter part of the
Nineteenth Century. Mahler tinkered with Beethoven's Ninth. People have
been silently mucking about with Tchaikovsky symphonies ever since they
appeared. The literalist view -- do at the very least what the composer
tells you -- owes its ascendance primarily to Toscanini. But even Toscanini
fiddled with scores, and no musical score intended to be played by humans
is complete. William Steinberg, at the time head of the Pittsburgh Symphony,
once had a guest gig in Cleveland. When he got back, his players asked
him how it went. "Awful," he said. "They did everything
I asked them to." Every conductor, and by extension composer, depends
on the skill and taste of individual musicians. You can't specify everything,
although I get the impression that Mahler tried in the detailed instructions
in his scores. I think the test lies in a listener's impression. After
a performance, do you say, "This is Mozart's Haffner,'" or "This
is Beecham's Mozart"? Each approach has its rewards and its dangers.
At their best, literalists create the illusion that you have snuck inside
Mozart's head. At their worst, you get nothing but dead music. The successful
subjectivist gives you a unique view of a score that illuminates it.
When he or she fails, you get a distortion, a grotesquerie.
I must admit I've changed over the years. I began as a rabid fan of literalists.
Toscanini could do no wrong. Conductors like Mengelberg and Stokowski
struck me as pure corn. Now, however, Toscanini often bores me, while
Mengelberg
and Furtwängler invite me on voyages of intellectual and emotional
discovery. Nevertheless, the major constant in my listening has remained
George Szell. He has never lost his fascination.
Szell stood out among the crowd mainly because of his precision. Every
note cleanly articulated, every rhythm accurate, every line in its proper
place in the texture. The Berlin Philharmonic itself (especially under
Karajan) could not match the Cleveland in this regard. Even Szell's Debussy
emphasized the contrapuntal -- heresy at the time (some called his recording
of La Mer, Das Meer, even La Merde), but today more and more the norm.
However, his detractors used this very precision against him by equating
it with coldness, as if some degree of sloppiness guaranteed inner soul.
I think it fairer to say that the emotion in Szell's readings roamed
over a range of warmth. There was generally one, and one only, loudest
point
in a movement. We've all encountered conductors who've never met a forte
they didn't want to smash and consequently have nowhere else to go. They
specialize in momentary jolts and jabs until eventually you no longer
care, like listening to a marathon political harangue. They deliver a
monochromatic
reading. While Szell had his flaws, I wouldn't call coldness one of them.
After all, he was known for his Brahms, Wagner, Dvorák, Tchaikovsky,
and Richard Strauss, none of whom really flourish in flat readings. He
gave live (though unfortunately never commercially released) the great
postwar readings of Verdi's Requiem.
Like Stokowski, Szell had a vision, quite different from Stokowski's,
of orchestral sound and playing. He began with the idea of wanting to
combine
the technical accuracy of American orchestras with the suppleness of
European. I would argue that to some extent he separated technique from
musical perfection.
Two qualities distinguish Szell for me. The precision alone fails to
move me. If Szell's performances were merely precise, I wouldn't care
either.
The precision provides lagniappe -- I admit I get a kick when I hear
what a composer actually wrote. However, precision is a byproduct of
Szell's
approach rather than its reason for being. Far more important are the
rhythmic excitement and shaping of a long movement, the mastery of dynamics,
the
shading of individual lines, and the sensitivity of each player in the
orchestra not merely to his section, but to all other players. You don't
get any of these things without precision. You have only to see the Cleveland
Orchestra live and watch body language to realize that these people play
like a string quartet -- that they listen to and watch one another, sending
out exquisitely sensitive tendrils that shape the music before your eyes
and ears. All this while watching the conductor as well. They did this
under Szell; they do it now. The Cleveland, despite the tenure of high-powered
directors like Boulez and Dohnányi, remains an ensemble close to
Szell's blueprint -- the orchestra as super-chamber ensemble -- and the
man's approaching forty years dead. Rhythmic attacks and articulation are
electric and electrifying. Not only does the orchestra get louder, it masters
diminuendo. The balance among sections, changing of course throughout a
piece, never falls short of superb. You simply don't get orchestral mud
or "swirlies" in a Szell performance. Because of all this,
you hear in scores not only elements that you hear nowhere else, but
familiar
moments so right that you hear them newly-minted.
I've encountered quite a few great Mozart performances, live and recorded,
over the nearly fifty years of my serious-listening life. I've also heard
many more bland ones. Especially with Mozart, simply playing the notes
doesn't cut it. The notes by themselves often don't pique interest, in
the way that a more chromatic line, an obviously startling counterpoint,
or a more sensual harmony might. Musicians often say that Mozart is the
hardest composer to play successfully. The notes -- at least for professionals
-- come easily, but the interpretation makes them sweat. And when you
do meet with success, nobody gives you credit for it, because the music
sounds
so "natural." It's much easier to make an effect with Beethoven,
I think. I can't recall a performance of the Fifth Symphony, for example,
that wasn't at least decent. I've heard many bad performances of Mozart's "Jupiter." Beethoven,
with his normative dramatic contrasts, gives a performer more help than
Mozart does. Mozart resists standard interpretive tricks -- for example,
taking a repeated passage or phrase more softly. The transparency of the
music often makes such strategies sound mechanical. Successful Mozart demands
that you think deeply through the score, both at large and in little. Not
coincidentally, the Mozart interpreters I admire come across with highly
individual points of view. Not even Toscanini gives me the illusion that "the
composer must have heard it in his head this way." Beecham's Mozart
sounds nothing like Rosbaud's, and Viennese interpreters seem to play
with home-team advantage. At their best, the music glows with a natural
warmth.
If nobody's Mozart is the Real Mozart, neither is Szell's. How does one
then describe his Mozart? Fortunately, the set includes Cleveland performances
before and after Szell became music director, with Erich Leinsdorf (the
music director immediately before Szell) and Louis Lane, Szell's Associate
Conductor. Leinsdorf gives a good, though standard performance of a Mozart
minuet. Sectional unanimity among the strings leaves something to be
desired. The music proceeds a bit roughly, although at least it does
move. With
Szell, "clean," "clear," and "elegant" come
to mind. Everything sounds full, but never stodgy. There's a patrician
chasteness to it, to me very modern, like a Brancusi sculpture. At this
point, I might add that Mozart tends to score heavily -- much more so
than Haydn (another Szell strength) -- but somehow much of that weight
disappears
in Szell's accounts and clings to Leinsdorf's. I have no idea how much
Szell knew of the intellectual history of classicism. Nevertheless, to
me he transmits a major part of the middle and late eighteenth-century
view of Greek art in his readings of Mozart -- a sense of measure, directness
sufficient to expression and not inflated. There are things I miss, of
course: notably the intersection of pietism and classicism, the Greek
myths as metaphors for the soul's yearning for God, which led to the
Romantic
era. But Szell gives me much of the rest and a view that seems to have
eluded just about everyone else.
Each disc deserves a review as full as the one I've written. I've taken
extensive notes during my listenings to this set. If I had written them
all up, I'd have wound up with a small monograph, nevertheless too long
for a review like this. Consequently, I'll just address some highlights.
Let's start with the crude first. The set boasts a number of, if not
bests, then at least unsurpassed recordings, essential to a clear-eyed,
non-clichéd
view of Mozart: Robert Marcellus's superb clarinet concerto, a stereo Symphony
No. 39 (perhaps my favorite Mozart symphony), Judith Raskin's Exsultate,
jubilate, of almost unbearable sweetness, an Eine kleine Nachtmusik that
just about defines great Mozart playing, and hands down the best performance
of the Marriage of Figaro Overture -- all this in addition to the Szell
party-pieces of Symphonies 40 and 41. And the rest of it is wonderful.
I'm told that when symphony musicians listen to classical recordings, they
listen to Szell's Mozart, Haydn, and Dvorák.
Szell had his own vision of Mozart and, if the historic recordings indicate
anything, he refined that vision throughout his life. Significantly,
he worked to reach it. Much of it has already taken shape in his 1947
account
of the Symphony No. 39. Leinsdorf had left the Cleveland in a pretty
good state, although it still had far to go to reach Koussevitzky's Boston
or
even Rodzinski's New York Philharmonic and Chicago Symphony. Nevertheless
Szell, who took over in 1946, even at this early point improves the sound
of the strings at least three-fold. They seem to shave both pounds and "beards" from
the tone, playing more like a single instrument. One notices the drive
of the line, without feeling "driven," and -- something which
Szell doesn't often get credit for, the sensation of the breathing line,
as if spun by a great Lieder singer. Of course, the mono sonic image
and the recording itself, heavy on the bass and compressed in dynamic
range,
obscures some of the orchestra's finesse, but Szell's Mozart is there,
at least in large outline. By the stereo remake, you still recognize
the same interpretive approach, but you'd be hard pressed to identify
this
as the same orchestra, the sonic image differs so much. The string tone,
while not rich (which you wouldn't want for Mozart anyway) is thrillingly
true. The players make their lines insightful essays in light and shadow,
and the attack of each phrase sends off little sparks. In the Minuet
movement -- again, quintessential Mozart playing -- the very first note
of the theme
raises goosebumps, without making itself obvious. The finale -- its rondo
theme a roulade of notes with a little kick and a wink at the end --
conjures up the world of opera buffa and especially Figaro. Szell also
draws lines
between this and something like Beethoven's Seventh. Light as sea-froth,
it seems to fly, and yet the measured tempo isn't all that fast. I've
tried to discover why, and the best I can do is to suppose that when
an ensemble
is that together, when articulation is that sharp, you lose the drag
of stutter and smear.
The mono readings (both from 1955) show the ensemble even tighter than
in 1947. Furthermore, the orchestra sound has acquired sinew. Compared
to the later stereo remakes, these readings are weightier, more athletic,
slightly edgier, but less detailed. Szell relaxed just a hair in the
interval. One might even say, relatively speaking, that he mellowed --
not merely
a bastard, but a bastard comfortable in his own skin. All these accounts
move me, but I do prefer some to others. The mono Symphony No. 40 conjures
up more storm clouds than its stereo sibling, which I find appropriate
to the character of the music. However, as good as the mono "Jupiter" is,
the stereo account reveals more of the masterpiece. The refinement, the
subtle shades in each line, the drama of line against line take us far
from the view of Mozart as musical idiot savant.
I've never heard a better Figaro overture than Szell's, making me pine
for the lost opportunity of a recording from him of the complete opera.
I'll have to settle for Giulini, I suppose. In Szell's reading, notice
the distinctiveness of each note in the opening phrase, without weight,
and the curiously nervous sense of expectancy, the sharpness of the little
stings and whirs from the strings in the second subject, terrifically galvanizing
without coming across like a jab in the ribs. Climaxes are beautifully
built and just as beautifully moved away from. Many orchestras can do the
first. Great orchestras do the second. Indeed, the entire dynamic range
of this reading , the gorgeous textural shifts -- from delicate to full
-- surpass any other reading I know, without violating classical proportions.
This applies as well to the less-encountered Symphony No. 28, which Glenn
Gould -- not normally fond of Mozart -- called a masterpiece. Our concert
and listening life focus on the last six symphonies, but Mozart wrote very
good ones from the mid-20s on. His earlier examples I find good examples
of what most composers were writing at the time. They show him learning
both the genre and the classical style, since really early Mozart owed
far more to Handel than to Haydn. By Symphony No. 25, at least, he's got
it down. The form begins to change in his hands, moving from a divertissement
to a vehicle for high musical argument. Mozart, of course, follows the
direction Haydn set. I admire Haydn tremendously. In many ways, I think
him Mozart's superior. But even I have to admit that he never wrote a symphony
as profound as Mozart's No. 39, and No. 28 is a superior symphony along
Haydn's lines.
Szell's recording, from the early Sixties, represents his golden period.
The orchestral sounds preternaturally clear, everyone moving together
and with such awareness of one another that you get the idea of a great
keyboard
player or guitarist whose musical intention never runs into a hitch on
the route from mind to fingers. The clarity you might expect, but listen
to the warmth of the opening movement's second subject. The temperature
gets raised in the second-movement Adagio -- a heartbreaking beauty sans
chicken fat. One feels a lot of "air" around the lines, as well
as tremendous energy held in reserve, that peeks through in the weight
of cadential phrases, which "bounce" a little. It reminds me
of the grace of an airship -- massive, yet serene. This largely comes
from Szell's magnificent bass section, sending out discreet, fluffy booms.
These
guys contribute much more than harmonic function; the chamber approach
affects every section. In the third movement, note the mastery of dynamic
contrasts. Indeed, Szell turns the movement into a thoughtful study of
dynamics -- not only soft-to-loud, but loud-to-soft, both sudden and
smooth. In the finale, Szell builds up plenty of fizz, but notice as
well how he
gets the music to breathe, especially in the second subject. Not many
conductors do this today. I don't know whether it represents a change
in interpretive
approach or a lost art.
Szell's music-making changed as he elaborated his vision. From the cross-breeding
of Europe and America, he moved to speaking of chamber music as a metaphor,
and perhaps something more than that. There's no question that he considered
chamber playing a necessity in a musician's education. In fact, he
sent a well-regarded young American piano virtuoso to Marlboro to put
in some
time before his Cleveland debut. The pianist became a chamber-music
(and Marlboro) enthusiast, returning to the festival summer after summer.
Szell's
notion began like a thought experiment. We have experienced the unity
of a soloist, a duet, a trio, and a quartet. What if we could keep
adding
players and retain that unity? Eventually we build an orchestra, and
the orchestra becomes a simple extension of a duet. Of course, in practice,
few orchestras have ever achieved this goal. I doubt many conductors
even
consciously pursued this. Fritz Reiner, a conductor I admire and Szell's
technical equal, nevertheless gets a different kind of clarity from
his orchestras. His process begins, not with the single player, but
with the
entire orchestra. Consequently, the ensemble is unanimous and well-balanced,
but the musical line lacks Szell's extreme flexibility.
The Divertimento No. 2 shows this pretty well. Mozart builds the piece
largely through the contrasts among two chamber groups -- winds vs.
massed French horns -- and the strings. We get seamless back-and-forths
between
soloists and strings in the first movement, similar to the conversation
between strings and piano in a piano quintet. The horn quartet in the
second minuet sounds not only full, but musical. However, Szell reaches
the sublime
in the slow second movement, for strings alone. There's no reaching
for effect. It's as if the music merely speaks for itself. If so, why
is this
so obviously the finest account of this piece? The same goes double
for Szell's Sinfonia Concertante. I can't tell you how many boring
performances
of this piece I've come across from interpreters who for some reason
believe that a suave, bland wash over everything gets the job done.
Szell shows
you the incredible power in the piece, lifting it from elegant entertainment
to 18th-century tragedy, particularly in yet another killer slow movement.
Here and there, one encounters the pietist undercurrents that led to
Romanticism and which Szell usually ignored. For some reason, he hits
them here. He
also makes you appreciate this as one of Mozart's most beautifully-orchestrated
works. The color shifts are subtle yet noticeable and create patterns
of interest on their own. Soloists Rafael Druian and Abraham Skernick
deliver
their part as a conversation of equals, though not twins. Druian has
an edge to his tone that Skernick doesn't match, and it's all to the
good,
as far as I'm concerned. The difference extends the variety of color
and drama.
The set by no means gets all of Szell's commercially-recorded Mozart.
The account of the Fifth Violin Concerto with Stern and the piano concerto
series with Serkin and Casadesus are conspicuous by their absence,
and
most of the other stuff belongs to other labels. However, Sony does
come up with two interesting addenda. Louis Lane, a woefully-underrated
conductor
who served as one of Szell's Associates and who made some of the most
enjoyable LPs in my late, lamented collection, leads the D-major Divertimento
with
Druian. The work curiously combines a suite with a violin concerto.
Robert Shaw apprenticed himself to Szell as another Cleveland Associate.
Cleveland
got to lick the gravy of a chorus as good as Hillis's Chicago Symphony.
The clarity of orchestral sound in both owes a lot to Szell. Lane absorbs
much of the rhythmic approach. He also gives you the overall line of
a passage, just as Szell does, although with less in the way of moment-to-moment
detail. It reminds me a bit of Szell in the Fifties, although Lane
records
more than a decade later. Still, he makes a jewel of a piece that hadn't
previously struck me as anything much.
Shaw, on the other hand, seems more personal in his bit from Mozart's
Requiem. I believe this originally appeared on the RCA LP Hallelujah! -- a collection
of blockbuster sacred choruses, still available on CD (RCA Victor Living
Stereo 63709). The orchestra sounds bigger and fuller, closer to Brahms
than to Mozart. The choir is good, but not as hair-raisingly precise
as it often could be. The "Lacrimosa" has problems every choir
must overcome. Mozart deliberately cuts phrases short, while aiming for
a long
line overall. These two tendencies fight each other throughout the piece.
Sometimes the choir falls into the trap of giving us little separate
sausages of notes rather than that long line. It's a good, rather than
a great job.
The other highlights Szell, the chamber musician. Given the importance
Szell attached to the genre, it surprises me that he made so few chamber
recordings. These accounts come from mid-career and near career end.
He partners members of the Budapest String quartet and his then-concertmaster,
Rafael Druian.
To take the latter first: The Sonatas for Piano and Violin (to give
them their due title) are rarely done that way. The violinist is the
star
and the pianist the sidekick. Szell and Druian turn this around, and
they shocked
me. I first thought of Szell, "Why don't you pick on somebody your
own size?" Then I realized that Mozart indeed wrote the sonatas
this way, with the violin in a supporting role. The uncanny unanimity
of articulation
between both players is there, as one expects, but there's also a range
of and delight in color from both instruments that comes as a genuine
surprise, if one considers the normal rap against Szell. What comes through
most
of all, however, is the joy in the music-making. These sonatas, to a
large extent, live in Papageno's woods, and Szell and Druian make the
most of
their visit.
The piano quartets come from another neighborhood altogether. The first,
dark and dramatic, has overtones of the tragedy of the Symphony No.
40, also in g-minor. I would call the reading fine, but not exceptional,
a meat-and-potatoes approach that smoothes over the considerable eccentricities
of the work. The second, in E-flat, has some of the monumentality of
the "Jupiter" symphony,
captured by Szell and the Budapest. The performance raises an interesting
point. The Budapest lends a "literalist" element. Szell, however,
supplies Romantic touches, pushing the work toward Beethoven. Perhaps
his affinity for Schumann, Wagner, and Strauss isn't so strange, after
all.
All in all, I welcome the set. It strikes me as essential to a classical
collection, a locus classicus of Mozart playing, and the sound quality
improves on the original LPs by quite a bit. Eric Kisch of the radio
program Musical Passions, provides an elegant and informed
appreciation of Szell.
However, Sony has just purged three-quarters of its classical division,
mainly because their pop sections are bleeding money, and we all know
Nobody Buys Classical Music. Consequently, don't look for either more
releases
like this or even for this set to hang around all that long.
S.G.S. (March 2007)
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