Originally posted by Simon B
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I don't really do opera either, so my take on Korngold is always going to be highly selective. I adore the Violin Concerto, which with the Symphony seems quintessentially a “late” masterpiece, the compositorial wisdom to pare back (in Korngoldian terms at least…), to be very direct in what you have to say and how you say it. (I have the Chandos Cello Concerto & Serenade(**) lined up for later, with the earlier left-hand Piano Concerto).
So I was upset that anyone would call the Symphony sprawling. I don’t think it wastes a note, and I love the crispness and almost neoclassical shape and drive to the finale, balancing the earlier defiance, anger and impassioned lament. It seems to me a serious statement, Korngold wanting to leave something substantial as a better self-representation; not rejecting his starry cinematic history, but embracing it in a more devotedly personal, artistically concentrated context.
Even more remarkable given the work’s history, resurrected from a score and parts by Kempe. Almost another Tale from Hollywood…The Outlier…
But if the Wilson album doesn't convince you, nothing will. Truly spectacular!
(**)
I recall hearing this live at the RLPO with Pesek in the 1990s, with the Brahms 4th in Part Two, from four rows back, in a half-empty hall….waves of sound swirled and crashed around me; or sang me sweetly to a temporary rest.
Waiting for my Taxi home, Pesek appeared in a tweed overcoat, looking even more beautiful than he did in his photos: the cheekbones of the classic rugged slav. I thanked him for the concert, especially the rarely heard Korngold.
“Very difficult to get those pizzicatos together in the intermezzo” he said.
“The Chamber Orchestra of Europe, they could do it”
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