Passion and Perplexity
By Tom Wachunas
“No one has yet written such incoherent
music, ostentatious, chaotic, and disturbing to the ear. The most abrupt
modulations succeed themselves in a truly repulsive sequence, and some minor
ideas, far from any sublime touch, complete the incredibly unpleasant
impression.” - written by a critic in
1806 for the German periodical, Der Freimuthige,
on the occasion of the world premiere of Beethoven’s Leonore Overture No.3 -
If there is a single idea that remains
maddeningly entangled with my overall sense of the March 23 program by the
Canton Symphony Orchestra (CSO) at Umstattdt Hall, it is that love is a many
splintered thing. For it was largely a theme of love, in wildly diverse
applications, that united the three works on the program: Beethoven’s Leonore Overture No. 3, Canti guerrieri ed amorosi (Songs of War and
Love) by American composer Claude Baker, and Symphony No. 5 by Dmitri
Shostakovich. The evening was a stormy orchestral journey, some of it difficult
to navigate, but in the end richly rewarding.
Not surprisingly, the performance of the
Beethoven overture was utterly entrancing. With inspiring clarity, the
orchestra wholly embraced the work’s intense pathos and urgent drama of
undeserved suffering and the resolute power of heroic love.
The second selection of the evening was the
much touted World Premiere of Claude Baker’s Canti guerrieri ed amorosi, commissioned through Meet the Composer’s
Commissioning Music/USA Program, and
written specifically to commemorate the CSO’s 75th Anniversary. Knowing
this in advance of the performance, I thought it reasonable to expect an
emotionally compelling encounter befitting the occasion. I anticipated a
joyful, accessible work that would showcase all the sublime lyrical depth,
astonishing technical virtuosity and sonorous aural range of this great
orchestra.
So much for lofty expectations. I do
realize that ‘joy’ and ‘accessibility’ are subjective elements which can be,
relative to a listener’s experience, completely absent from many contemporary orchestral
pieces. And so it is that I found this particular piece to be an arduous
conceptual exercise in sonic abstraction of a highly disaffecting sort. In this
twenty minute-long, three movement excursion into labyrinthine polyrhythms,
tonal dissonances and relentlessly overlapping percussive textures, melody had
left the building.
To be fair, Baker’s extensive program notes
effectively illuminated the work’s intellectual thrust. Perhaps a fuller
appreciation of its structural and aural complexities depends upon the extent
of our familiarity with the medieval and Renaissance vocal compositions (about
love and war) that inspired them. Even so, Baker states that he focused his
energies on a more visceral presentation of the poetic essence of his source
texts as opposed to rendering literal transcriptions of musical content.
Consequently, melodic references to the Monteverdi madrigal, or the
onomatopoetic song by Clement Janequin, for example, were admittedly minimal if
discernible at all.
While this was surely a challenging work
for the audience, it was all the more so for the orchestra. Every section
played with an eerily robotic if not riveting concentration and precision as
they coaxed bizarre sound effects from their instruments. Judging from the lukewarm
audience reception, this sort of musical severity was far too subtle and
perplexing to elicit anything like real affection for the material. Love can indeed be a battlefield.
We
surely live in an era of cultural tolerance (albeit begrudging at times) for
even the most alienating musical experiences, but such was not the case for
Dmitri Shostakovich in 1936 Moscow. He was severely denounced and blacklisted
by Joseph Stalin for his music that didn’t meet government “standards.”
Shostakovich called his Symphony No.5, the final work on this program, “…a
Soviet artist’s practical, creative reply to just criticism.” The composer’s explanation of the work being
about “joy of living” was just vague enough to regain his good standing, even
though the work is now largely regarded not as an abject apology, but as a
bittersweet and ironic skewering of pompous Socialist expectations.
While there is a sense of Shostakovich’s
deep love for his homeland threaded through this symphony, I think of its
inclusion here, replete as it is with tumultuous emotionality, as a brilliant
vehicle for Maestro Gerhardt Zimmermann to communicate his and the orchestra’s
palpable love for the music itself. This is certainly not to presume that the
CSO was in any way unsupportive of, or unenthused by, the previous work’s
challenges, but simply to place afresh the Shostakovich work in the context of
a “practical, creative reply.”
And what a bedazzling reply it was! Here
was the orchestra at its electrifying best, totally immersed in and committed
to soaring expressivity. Even Zimmermann’s demeanor at the podium was
especially animated, his every impassioned gesture seeming to inject his
musicians with inexhaustible vigor and finesse.
As
the roar of approval from the audience would testify, musical matters of the
heart such as this one will trump cerebral experiments every time.
PHOTO: Maestro Gerhardt Zimmermann
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