'CD of the Week' Classic FM Radio
'Classical CD of the Week' Sunday Times
Critics' Choice 'Sound of 2012' The Independent
Named one of the top ten young ‘conductors on the verge of greatness' by Gramophone Magazine, Robin is the perfect conductor to bring out the deep colours and emotions of Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique while balancing the orchestra and keeping the pace to create an impressive and dynamic sound throughout.
Robin opened the Scottish Chamber Orchestra's 2011/12 season with a blistering Berlioz programme hailed by the critics as ‘compelling'. With this recording Robin aims to offer audiences ‘a thought-provoking and new way of listening to the piece.' ‘Symphonie Fantastique' is the first in a series of Berlioz recordings undertaken by the SCO and Ticciati: a recording of Nuits d'été and the Death of Cleopatra are planned for 2012.
Robin's profile continues to build; in 2011 he was voted one of 'Tomorrow's Icons' by Gramophone and was announced as the next music director of Glyndebourne, taking over from Vladimir Jurowski in 2014.
This
recording was made possible with support from the SCO Sir Charles Mackerras
Fund.
Booklet Notes:
Symphonie
Fantastique (1830 - 1832)
For
a long time the controversy surrounding the Symphonie Fantastique prevented
a thorough and sensible examination of the music itself - a serious analysis of
what was in it and how it was put together. Yet Berlioz was certainly not the
first or the last composer to re-use existing material (think of Beethoven,
think of Brahms) - or to find musical stimulus in literary sources: in this
case, the writings of Chateaubriand, Goethe and Victor Hugo. In one of the
poems in Hugo's Odes et Ballades the
striking of midnight on a monastery bell precipitates a hideous assembly of
witches and half-human, half-animal creatures who execute a whirling
round-dance and perform obscene parodies of the rituals of the church, an image
that Berlioz transmutes into his highly original and skilfully constructed
finale. Hugo's passionate fictional tract against capital punishment, Le dernier jour d'un condamné, which
Berlioz read shortly before he began to compose the symphony, was another
source. There we find the phrase ‘an idée
fixe haunting the mind every hour, every moment', and, as the chained
convicts dance in a ring in the prison courtyard, ‘the clash of their chains'
serves as ‘orchestra to their raucous song', the whole picture being the ‘image
of a witches' sabbath'.
None
of this in any way militates against the symphony's claim to be a coherent work
of art. As always, what matters is not what may have gone into the making of a
work but what comes out. Modern commentators and critics have decisively
vindicated the integrity of the Symphonie
Fantastique - what Wilfrid Mellers calls its ‘taut design' and Edward Cone
the unity that ‘goes much deeper than the mere recurrence of the idée fixe'.
The
work used to also be treated as a completely unheralded event in the history of
music, coming out of nowhere - the most miraculous birth, it was said, since
Athena sprang fully armed from the head of Zeus. That is no more than at best a
half-truth. With all its innovations - including
the introduction of instruments, textures and rhythms new to symphonic music -
the Symphonie Fantastique has roots, deep roots, in other music, past
and present: not least the music of Gluck and Spontini, which was for several
years Berlioz's main diet and whose melodic style he absorbed into his
innermost being when he first came to Paris in 1821, a boy of seventeen who had
never heard an orchestra.
A
few years later, the discovery of Weber, and still more of Beethoven at the
Conservatoire concerts in 1828, 1829 and 1830 (paralleling his discoveries of
Goethe and Shakespeare), had an even more profound effect on the young musician
till then reared on French classical opera. The Fantastique is unthinkable without Beethoven's Pastoral and Fifth,
and without Der Freischütz. Above
all, the revelation of the symphony as a dramatic form par excellence, and of
the orchestra as an expressive instrument of undreamed richness and
flexibility, became, for Berlioz, the springboard for a leap into unknown
territory. It opened before him a new world which he must at all costs enter
and inhabit.
On
the point of starting to compose the Fantastique,
in January 1830, he told his sister Nancy: ‘Ah, my sister, you can't imagine
what pleasure a composer feels who writes freely in response to his own will
alone. When I have drawn the first accolade of my score, where my instruments
are ranked in battle array - when I think of the virgin lands which academic
prejudice [in France] has left untouched till now and which since my
emancipation I regard as my domain - I rush forward with a kind of fury to
cultivate it'.
Already,
in a letter written to a friend a year earlier, when ideas for the symphony had
begun to take shape in his mind, we get a sense of Berlioz's intense
excitement: ‘Now that I have broken the chains of routine, I see an immense
territory stretching before me which academic rules forbade me to enter. Now
that I have heard that awe-inspiring giant Beethoven I realise what point the
art of music has reached. It's a question of taking it up at that point and
carrying it further - no, not further, that's impossible, he attained the
limits of art, but as far in another direction'.
The
influence of Beethoven, however, could only be general, not specific; it was a
matter of inspiration, not imitation. Without doubt there are sounds and
colours and gestures in the work that are indebted to Beethoven's example. One
can cite the emancipation of the timpani, used as an independent instrument,
not just as reinforcement of the tuttis; the macabre, grotesque effect of
bassoons in the high register in the ‘Marche
au supplice', inspired by the scherzo of Beethoven's Fifth;
in the third movement, the ‘Scène
aux champs', certain country images like the cry of the
quail (from the Pastoral) and, in the movement's great central crisis and its
resolution, the successive fortissimo diminished sevenths of the Fifth's first
movement and the irregular diminuendo chords of Florestan's aria in Fidelio. But the form of the work is
Berlioz's and no one else's. So, though he is deeply concerned with issues of
musical architecture, he works out his own salvation. Though he will learn from
Beethoven's technique of thematic transformation, he will not use it as a
model. He composes in melodic spans rather than in motifs. The work's recurring
melody - the idée fixe - is forty
bars long; and its repetition two thirds of the way through the first movement
represents not a sonata reprise but a stage in the theme's evolution from
monody to full orchestral statement.
No one - not least in France - had composed symphonic music or
used the orchestra like this before. As Michael Steinberg says, ‘no disrespect
to Mahler or Shostakovich, but this is the most remarkable First Symphony ever
written'. It was typical of Berlioz's boldness and freedom of spirit that his
first major orchestral work comprised a mixture of genres analogous to what the
Romantic dramatists were attempting after the example of Shakespeare - bringing
the theatre into the concert hall - and
that in doing so he should override the normal categories of symphonic
discourse and create his own idiosyncratic version of classical form in
response to the demands of the musical drama: the ‘Episode in the Life of an
Artist' that is the work's subtitle.
Yet the score given at the Conservatoire Hall in December 1830
was, to him, a logical consequence of the Beethovenian epiphany that he had had
two years earlier in the same hall. It was addressed to the same eager young
public and performed by many of the same players, under the same conductor,
François Antoine Habeneck.
It might embody autobiographical elements: not just his much
publicised passion for the Shakespearean actress Harriet Smithson, but his
whole emotional and spiritual existence up till then - as he wrote at the front
of the manuscript, quoting a poem by Victor Hugo, ‘All I have suffered, all I
have attempted ... The loves, the labours, the bereavements of my youth... my
heart's book inscribed on every page'. For Berlioz, however, all this was not
essentially different from what Beethoven had done in his Fifth and Sixth
symphonies. Carrying on from him, he could use intense personal experience, and
movement titles, to bring music's inherent expressivity still further into the
open and, at the same time, extend its frame of reference and blur still more
the distinction between so-called ‘pure music' and music associated with an
identifiable human situation. All sorts of extra-musical ideas could go into
the composition, yet music remained sovereign. It could describe the course of
one man's hopeless passion for a distant beloved and still be - as Beethoven
said of the Pastoral - ‘expression of feeling rather than painting', the whole
contained within a disciplined musical structure.
The literary programme offered to the Conservatoire audience
gave the context of the work; it introduced the ‘instrumental drama' (to quote
Berlioz's prefatory note) whose ‘outline, lacking the assistance of speech,
needs to be explained in advance'. It is not this that holds the symphony
together and makes it a timeless record of the ardours and torments of the
young imagination. The music does that.
The five movements may be summed up as follows:
1 Slow
introduction; sadness and imagined happiness, creating out of a state of yearning
an image of the ideal woman, represented (Allegro) by the idée fixe - a long, asymmetrically phrased melodic span, first
heard virtually unaccompanied, then gradually integrated
into the full orchestra. The melody, in its alternate exaltation and dejection,
its fevers and momentary calms, forms the main argument. At the end, like a
storm that has blown itself out, it comes to rest on a series of solemn chords.
2 A ball, at which the beloved is present. Waltz: at first
dreamlike, then glittering, finally garish. Middle section with the idée fixe assimilated to the rhythm of
the dance.
3 A shepherd pipes a melancholy song, answered from afar by
another. Pastoral scene: a long, serene melody, with similarities of outline to
the idée fixe and, like it, presented
as monody, by flute and first violins, then in progressively fuller textures.
Agitated climax, precipitated by the idée
fixe, which later takes on a more tranquil air (without its characteristic
sighing fourth). Dusk, distant thunder. The first shepherd now pipes alone.
Drums and solo horn prepare for:
4 ‘Marche
au supplice'. The
artist, under the influence of opium, imagines he has killed the beloved and,
accompanied by noisy crowds, is being marched through the streets to execution.
The dreams of the first three movements are now intensified into nightmare and
the full orchestral forces deployed: massive brass and percussion, prominent
and grotesque bassoons. The idée fixe
reappears pianissimo on solo clarinet, but is cut off by the guillotine stroke
of the whole orchestra.
5 Strange mewings, muffled explosions, distant cries, as a throng
of demons and sorcerers, summoned from far and wide, gather to celebrate
Sabbath night. The executed lover witnesses his own funeral. The beloved
melody, now a lewd distortion of itself - a vulgar, cackling tune on a shrill E
flat clarinet - joins the revels. Dies
irae, parody of the church's ritual of the dead. Witches' round dance. The
climax, after a long crescendo, combines round dance and Dies irae in a tour de force of rhythmic and orchestral virtuosity.
‘Overture', Béatrice et Bénédict
Berlioz
had often thought of composing an opera on Much
Ado about Nothing. When eventually he decided to do so - for the opening
season of the new theatre in the German spa town of Baden-Baden - he
deliberately limited his ambitions: the libretto - based closely on the text of
the play but written by the composer - removes Don John and his sinister
intrigue against Hero altogether and sets only a part of Shakespeare's
tragi-comedy, confining the action almost entirely (in Berlioz's words) to
‘persuading Beatrice and Benedick that they love each other'. Though still only
in his late 50s, Berlioz was in nearly constant pain (from what his doctors
called ‘intestinal neuralgia' but what was probably Crohn's Disease) and with
no illusions about his career in his native France.
The
prodigality of ideas and unstoppable energy found in Berlioz's earlier Italian
comedy, Benvenuto Cellini, give way
here to an extreme economy and a demonstration of the expressive possibilities
in the basic means of music, notably the scale. Writing the work was, he said,
‘a relaxation from The Trojans', the
epic five-act opera he had recently completed, which he knew was his magnum
opus but for which there was no prospect of a production. It was symbolic of
the state of his career that what would be his last major work was written not
for Paris but for a German provincial town.
Yet
the music of the work - ‘a caprice written with the point of a needle', Berlioz
called it - has no trace of bitterness and, on the contrary, has wit and grace
and lightness of touch. It accepts life as it is. The opera is a
divertissement, not a grand statement. It celebrates love not - as in The Trojans - as a devouring, all-consuming passion but as ‘a flame, a will
o' the wisp, coming from no one knows where, gleaming then vanishing from
sight, for the distraction of our souls'. Mad, perhaps; but ‘madness is better
than stupidity' - words that all come from the final number of the opera, where
Benedick and Beatrice play at hiding their recognition of twin natures.
The
‘Overture', which was composed last, and which bears the date '25 February
1862' and ‘The End' (in English), sums up the work. Racy, headlong yet poised,
exuberant, ironic, brilliant but touched with warmth of heart, it breathes a
single atmosphere while drawing on half a dozen different numbers from the
opera: the wide melodic spans of Beatrice's aria, the magical pianissimo
conclusion of the ‘Nocturne', the triumphant but rather empty tuttis of the
conventional Hero's aria, the long descending and ascending melody of the ‘Wedding
March', the men's trio's conspiratorial humour, above all the motif of the
final ‘Scherzo-Duettino', whose nimble triplet rhythm and angular dotted phrase
work their way in everywhere and spread their gleeful mirth across the whole
texture of the orchestra.
© David
Cairns, 2012
Recording information:
Recorded at Usher Hall, Edinburgh UK from 7th- 10th October 2011
Produced by Philip Hobbs
Engineered by Philip Hobbs & Calum Malcolm
Assistant Engineer: Robert Cammidge
Post-production by Julia Thomas, Finesplice, UK
Julio de Diego image reproduced with permission from the Hector Belioz Website (http://www.hberlioz.com/)
Photos of Robin Ticciati by Marco Borggreve
Photo of SCO by Chris Christodoulou
The ‘Overture' from Béatrice et Bénédict is published by BÄRENREITER-VERLAG, KASSEL
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