Robin Ticciati & SCO - Schumann: The Symphonies - Gramophone
What blessed times these are for Schumannistas...this one from the Scottish Chamber Orchestra and
Robin Ticciati, a team that has already proved itself admirably on disc in
Berlioz (5/12, 6/13). Ticciati follows NézetSéguin's lead in opting for the
1851 revision of the Fourth Symphony rather than the sparer 1841 version...
Clarity has been a common feature of recent recordings of Schumann's orchestral
music, giving the lie yet again to the old canard about his cack-handed
orchestral abilities. Here, close reading of the score combines with Philip
Hobbs's transparent surround-sound engineering (Perth Concert Hall last
November and December) in a recording teeming with revealing detail. Ticciati
clearly knows how he wants this music to go and his strong partnership with the
Edinburgh players enables him to shape readings notable for their energy and
individuality. The Fourth receives a particularly forceful performance, with
go-ahead tempi combining with its bolstered orchestration to demonstrate how
the earlier version was but a transitory stage in the work's evolution. In the
Second, too, Ticciati shows how this is the most uneasy expression of the key
of C major, the final songful peroration hard-won through the obsessions of the
earlier movements.
Throughout, the performances are characterised by a woodwind sweetness that is
becoming a trademark of this orchestra. The timpanist uses hard sticks to cut
through the texture at strategic moments and brass are doleful or stentorian as
required. This is an extremely likeable and beautifully recorded
traversal, worthy of standing alongside any of its recent competitors.