William Schuman
Symphony No. 8; Night Journey; Variations on 'America'
Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz, conductor
Review By Joe Milicia
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This new
release completes Gerard Schwarz's recorded survey of the published symphonies
of William Schuman for
Naxos
. (Schuman disowned his youthful First and Second Symphonies, so the survey
includes Nos. 3 through 10.) A distinguished American composer known also for
his leadership of the Julliard School and Lincoln Center, Schuman is not heard
very often in the concert hall, except for his New
England Triptych (based on old American tunes), his Third Symphony,
and on occasion the Symphony for Strings (the Fifth). But the Eighth Symphony is
a major work, written for the inaugural celebrations of
Lincoln
Center's Philharmonic (now Avery Fisher) Hall. The rendition of Leonard Bernstein
and the New York Philharmonic, who premiered the work and recorded it five days
later, can still be heard on a Sony CD [SMK 63163], paired with the Third and
Fifth Symphonies — an indispensable disc for anyone who loves modern American
music. For competition, Naxos offers a fine performance, superior sound, and a
different set of companion pieces: a chamber arrangement of a Martha Graham
ballet and a reissue of what might be called Schuman's Greatest Hit, his
arrangement of Charles Ives' organ solo Variations on ‘America.'
The Eighth Symphony is unusual in having
essentially two slow movements in a row (a Lento and a Largo, though both speed up in the middle), followed by a Presto finale. Every bar of
the symphony is distinctively Schumanesque — most noticeably in the rich
string sonorities, the stuttering brass outbursts, the angular melodies. And yet
the Eighth is full of striking passages unique to itself, beginning with its
strange, somber opening chord—strings, woodwinds and a haunting combination of
glockenspiel, tubular bells, vibraphone, two harps and a piano — from which
after a few quieter repetitions a mournful (and very challenging) French horn
solo emerges. In all three movements the climaxes featuring the whole brass
section, always exciting in a Schuman work, are especially memorable, and the
Presto Finale is breathtakingly complex in its rhythmic patterns and full of
quirky details, like an extended duet between bass clarinet and bassoon plus a
brief vibraphone solo.
The sound on the 1962 Bernstein/New York
Philharmonic recording is still impressive, though a little muddy in the louder
ensemble passages. But the new
Naxos
recording is superb in every way, capturing both the colors of the solo
instruments and the power of the full ensemble, with excellent balance
throughout. As for performance, I have to say that Bernstein's has more
momentum — more drive from one moment to the next, with a more thrilling final
page. Part of this may be a matter of tempo: Bernstein takes the first and third
movements faster than Schwarz (10'16" vs. 11'09"; 8'20" vs.
9'30"), though his
Largo
is slower (12' 34" vs. 11' 49"). (Both exceed the estimated 30" listed
in the score, Bernstein at 31' 06", Schwarz at 32' 28".) But the Seattle
Symphony is certainly up to the challenge, as the outstanding sound reveals.
Schuman composed several ballet scores, including
one in 1945 for Anthony Tutor with the great film-noir title Undertow,
and four for Martha Graham. (Naxos' program annotator, Joseph W. Polisi, interestingly proposes that Schuman's
work with these great choreographers led to his music becoming "more complex,
intense, and emotionally charged.") Night
Journey, the first of the Graham ballets (1947), is based on the
Oedipus myth but told from the perspective of Jocasta. In 1981 Schuman reduced
the score to chamber ensemble (rather the opposite of Aaron Copland beefing up
his original score for Graham's Appalachian
Spring) and cut some passages to create a piece called Night
Journey: Choreographic Poem for Fifteen Instruments, which is what
Schwarz and
Seattle
have recorded here. After several hearings I'm not convinced that it's one
of Schuman's major scores. I hesitate even to mention Samuel Barber's great
score for Graham's Medea,
composed the same year, let alone Copland's 1944 ballet, though it works very
well with Graham's choreography, as far as I can judge by an 8-minute YouTube
excerpt. Most of the music of the shortened score is very slow-paced, as if
portraying Jocasta's stunned silence after learning the truth about her
husband-son, though with agitated passages. The
Seattle
ensemble is again vividly captured by
Naxos' engineers, but I wish Polisi's otherwise valuable notes had listed those
fifteen instruments.
To fill out the disc Naxos has reissued Schwarz
and
Seattle
's 1991
Delos
recording (issued in 1992) of the Ives/Schuman variations on "My Country
‘Tis of Thee." The original piece — the classic recording is by E. Power
Biggs — is a hilarious nose-thumbing send-up of both organ music styles of
1890s America and of the traditional form of the variations-on-a-theme.
Schuman's jaunty orchestration, premiered in 1964, is great fun, though the
original organ work is even more satisfying. The sound of the reissue is
adequate but the orchestra sounds boxed in, compared to the sonic fullness of
the symphony and ballet. In short, the powerful performance of the Eighth
Symphony is what makes this CD well worth acquiring.
Performance:
Enjoyment:
Sound
Quality:
for Symphony No. 8 and Night Journey
for Variations