Carl Orff Carmina Burana
London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
St Clement Danes Grammar School Boys Choir
Conducted by André Previn
Review By Phil Gold
One of the
most popular and idiosyncratic works of the twentieth century, Orff's Carmina
Burana is meant to overwhelm the senses. Not just the ears, but the eyes
too, with dancers accompanying the music. We don't have that here of course,
but if you close your eyes this very vivid performance may conjure up the
dancers for you. This work, the first in a cycle of three, sets long lost 13th
century poetry, discovered in a Benedictine monastery in the 19th
century, to music. It looks back to very early music and strips out layers of
complex harmony and subtlety to highlight instead simplicity and primitive
rhythms. The work was published in 1936 and its success was immediate. Even if
you've never heard the work straight through, chances are you've been
exposed to parts of it in various movie soundtracks.
Previn, a jazz pianist and composer as well as an
orchestral conductor, may not be the last word in the standard
romantic/classical repertoire but his relationship with the LSO was very special
indeed and his command over timing, balance, phrasing and tone color are
exceptionally strong. There have been countless performances of Carmina Burana
since this one was set down in December 1974 but few of them have outclassed the
fidelity of the analog recording in the fine acoustic of London's Kingsway
Hall, and none to my knowledge have presented so clearly the imaginative power
of Orff's early masterpiece. Previn does not play for effect here, as it must
be so tempting to do. His tempi are brilliantly chosen throughout, and for each
part in relation to the whole. He gets out of the way and mixes extreme
simplicity and beauty with raucous power, catching the rhythmic writing as
perhaps only a jazz musician can.
This recording has been in the catalog for ever,
with a fine EMI digital remastering in 1998 improving on the original CD release
which was somewhat thin and strident. HI-Q Records have pulled out all the stops
by engaging Japan's JVC XRCD team to master and manufacture this new version,
taking advantage of their Digital K2 process to eliminate jitter and their DVD
K2 laser to cut the "Redbook" format CD glass master. Basically, this is a
painstaking process with very close attention paid to the details. HI-Q Records
are amassing a library of superb recording from the early years of stereo
reissued to the highest standards, so all power to them.
I can't tell you how this issue compares to all
earlier releases but I can say with one small caveat that the sound is
exemplary, as good as you are going to get in Redbook format for any classical
analog reissue. What sounds like brightness at the explosive opening is simply
the orchestration and choral power as written. Later movements show a warmer
disposition, some excellent deep bass and unusually fine percussion sounds. That
caveat? On one or two occasions the last decaying tones of a particular movement
are truncated and the sound cuts abruptly to black. I would prefer the low level
of tape hiss be maintained between movements so as not to draw attention to the
gaps between tracks. You may not even notice this in your system.
Thanks to the fine sound and the enormous dynamic
range that it captures, we are brought very close to the music itself. And this
is where Previn succeeds in convincing us this is truly a masterpiece, while in
some other hands it is a pastiche or even a showpiece. Previn coaxes a warm
involving performance from all his soloists, vocal and instrumental, and on the
large orchestral and choral forces involved. I came away with a higher opinion
of Carmina Burana and Orff the composer than I had coming in. How I wish that as
I could admire Orff the man, but that's quite another story.
Performance:
Enjoyment:
Recording
Quality: