Robin Ticciati & SCO - Schumann: The Symphonies - SA-CD.net
Judging by the number of recorded cycles of Schumann
Symphonies that have appeared in the last year or so from conductors as diverse
as Simon Rattle, Parvo Järvi, Thomas Dausgaard et al., it would appear that
record companies believe that the public has an insatiable appetite for new
versions of these works on disc. Nevertheless, whilst the market may be
reaching saturation point, there is always room to accommodate a set as
brilliantly performed and recorded as this latest one from the charismatic
Robin Ticciati and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra.
Having
been greatly impressed with Ticciati's performances of Berlioz, Brahms and
Bruckner both in the concert hall and on disc I was keen to see how he tackled
the music of one his favourite composers about which he colourfully writes "
Struggle, love, suicide, drinking, prostitutes, fragrance, flowers, poetry
ecstasy, passion...for me the Schumann symphonies have everything in them that
define Romanticism". Suffice it to say I was not disappointed.
On
this two-disc SACD set from Linn, the symphonies are presented in numerical
order - two per disc and in the case of Symphony No.4, the conductor has opted
for the familiar revised 1851 version. Though played on modern instruments
these are historically aware performances in both style and scale - lean sounding
strings played with little vibrato, antiphonal seating of the violins, vivid
timpani played with hard sticks, clear woodwind and cutting trumpets and
trombones. In these respects they emulate the indispensable 1997 CD set of
Schumann's orchestral works from John Eliot Gardiner and his Orchestre
Révolutionnaire et Romantique.
The
Scottish Chamber Orchestra, here at a complement of 54 musicians, play
magnificently throughout with no lack of body or fullness of tone and respond
wholeheartedly to the panache of Ticciati's exhilarating conducting. Ticciati's
tempi seem especially well chosen in all four Symphonies - fleet, but never
rushed, and fractionally slower than some of the competition. His judicious
speeds combined with the crisp articulation from the players of the SCO mean
that movements such as the 'Scherzo' of the 2nd Symphony (marked 'Allegro
vivace') never turn into the mad scramble found on some other versions of this
work. Elsewhere Ticciati is cognisant of the music's grandeur and power. An example
of this being the spine-tingling manner with which he gradually builds the
tension in the transition passage from the 'Scherzo' to the 'Finale' of the 4th
Symphony before its satisfying catharsis.
The
recordings were made in the Concert Hall, Perth, Scotland (25, 26 & 30
November and 1-3 December 2013). This venue's acoustic possesses just the right
amount of reverberation to impart both clarity and warmth to the sound and
Philip Hobbs' production and engineering could hardly be bettered.
In
short, these superb accounts from Robin Ticciati and the Scottish Chamber
Orchestra certainly place them amongst the finest available thanks both to
Ticciati's vital conducting and the brilliantly immediate recorded sound.
Altogether an impressive release.