BRAHMS 4 Serious Songs. Clarinet Sonata No 1
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Detlev Glanert, Johannes Brahms
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Ondine
Magazine Review Date: 03/2017
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 59
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: ODE1263-2
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(4) Ernste Gesänge, 'Four Serious Songs' |
Johannes Brahms, Composer
Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra Johannes Brahms, Composer Michael Nagy, Baritone Olari Elts, Conductor |
Weites Land (Distant Land) |
Detlev Glanert, Composer
Detlev Glanert, Composer Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra Olari Elts, Conductor |
Sonata for Clarinet and Piano No. 1 |
Johannes Brahms, Composer
Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra Johannes Brahms, Composer Kari Kriikku, Clarinet Olari Elts, Conductor |
Author: Andrew Mellor
The composer’s arrangement of Brahms’s Four Serious Songs consists of the songs themselves – structurally unchanged but orchestrated – embedded into a continuous orchestral flow encompassing four preludes and an epilogue. Glanert knows his Brahms (note the way he deploys low winds and horns in the songs) but the piece is entirely new given the tendency towards technicoloured angst that comes in the orchestral preludes, each induced by the final bars of the songs that precede them. The effect is akin to that of Brahms’s songs bobbing up in a strange dream, where the more troubling, fantastical surrounding elements nevertheless share their DNA.
An advancing of that idea is heard in Glanert’s ‘vision’ of Brahms’s Fourth Symphony, Weites Land. Here, too, Glanert’s knowledge of Brahms (modulation, instrument deployment) is apparent but it comes at a price if you’re a fan of Glanert himself. Without much of a residue of its own, this piece needs to be heard as a prelude to the symphony – as commissioned.
But it serves a purpose in this programme, which ends with Luciano Berio’s orchestration of Brahms’s Clarinet Sonata No 1. As Guy Rickards’s note suggests, Berio believed orchestral clothing transformed the sonata into a concerto. If so, it would be Brahms’s weakest by some margin. Sometimes the Brahmsian lilt is inhibited (Berio cramming in too much inner movement); at others it’s nailed.
It pains me to moan about such fine musicians but the Helsinki Philharmonic, with their delicate, tight string sound, are never going to conjure up Brahmsian depth; and, for all his dexterity, Kari Kriikku can lack the sense of autumnal glow the music suggests. Ditto Michael Nagy, whose tone and delivery are highly attractive but unerringly narrow. In summary, a frustrated gem.
Discover the world's largest classical music catalogue with Presto Music.
Gramophone Digital Club
- Digital Edition
- Digital Archive
- Reviews Database
- Full website access
From £8.75 / month
SubscribeGramophone Full Club
- Print Edition
- Digital Edition
- Digital Archive
- Reviews Database
- Full website access
From £11.00 / month
Subscribe
If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.