WEINBERG Chamber Symphonies Nos 3 & 4
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Mieczyslaw Weinberg
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Chandos
Magazine Review Date: 02/2015
Media Format: Super Audio CD
Media Runtime: 66
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CHSA5146
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Chamber Symphony No. 3 |
Mieczyslaw Weinberg, Composer
Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra Mieczyslaw Weinberg, Composer Thord Svedlund, Conductor |
Chamber Symphony No. 4 |
Mieczyslaw Weinberg, Composer
Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra Mieczyslaw Weinberg, Composer Thord Svedlund, Conductor |
Author: Edward Seckerson
The opening Lento of Symphony No 3 for string orchestra, which is in turn directly derived from his String Quartet No 5 (these pieces not only evolve from earlier works but thrive on self-quotation from elsewhere in his oeuvre), is entitled ‘Melody’ and that is precisely what you get – an unvarnished unison in search of harmony and development (very Bartókian), both of which it finds before emerging once more as the purest ‘confessional’. In the boisterous and explosive second movement it’s as if both Britten and Shostakovich have morphed into a dynamic and wilful alliance. Weinberg undoubtedly gets his immediacy and nose for atmosphere from Shostakovich (his self-confessed idol – and there was mutual admiration) but he is his own man and full of surprises. A boldness and directness prevails and he clearly relishes the gamesmanship of composition – like the freewheeling Andantino finale of this piece.
The Fourth opens with a great example of what makes Weinberg’s themes so individual: a ‘Chorale’ borrowed from his opera The Portrait, it’s a total ‘earworm’. But suddenly there is an obbligato clarinet among the strings and with it a multitude of Klezmer associations. That clarinet enjoys a wild ride in the second-movement Allegro molto, and again the rug is pulled from beneath us at the close when solo violin and cello are given quite unexpected monologues like afterthoughts on what has passed. An aching folksiness pervades the slow movement and a triangle offers two single shafts of light at the beginning and very end (a tiny touch of genius) of a final movement which seems to have been composed in the playing of it.
The Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra under Thord Svedlund make an excellent case for these intriguing pieces and Chandos brings them to us with vivid immediacy. Weinberg is coming in from the cold.
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