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            Antonín DVOŘÁK 
              (1841-1904)  
              Masterworks  
              DVD 1 
              Symphony no.7 in D minor, op.70 (1884-5) [38:24]  
              Slavonic dances (second series), op.72 (1887) [39:58]  
              Romance for violin and orchestra, op.11 (1873-7) [14:46]  
              DVD 2  
              Symphony no.8 in G major, op.88 (1889) [40:25]  
              Piano concerto in G minor, op.33 (1876) [42:46]  
              DVD 3 
              Symphony no.9 in E minor, op.95 (1893) [42:54]  
              Cello concerto in B minor, op.104 (1894-5) [40:50]  
                
              Ivan Zenaty (violin); Igor Ardašev (piano);Mischa Maisky (cello) 
               
              Prague Symphony Orchestra/Jiří Bělohlávek 
              (1); Petr Altrichter (2); Libor Pešek (3)  
              rec. live, Alte Oper Frankfurt, 1993  
              Sound: PCM stereo, DD 5.1, DTS 5.1  
              Picture: NTSC/4:3  
              Region: 0 (worldwide) 
                
              ARTHAUS MUSIK   
              107 513 [3 DVDs: 100:00 + 88:00 + 89:00]  
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                How do we justify watching classical music on TV at home, especially 
                  given that most of us experience patently inferior sound reproduction 
                  on our television sets? For some musical events - opera, ballet 
                  - the answer is obvious. The music was specifically written 
                  to be accompanied by visual elements and loses to a hugely significant 
                  degree by their absence.  
                     
                  What about music that was written purely to be listened to in 
                  its own right? Concert halls are, after all, not intrinsic in 
                  themselves to the listening experience: they are merely an economically 
                  efficient means to gather a paying audience together to finance 
                  the performance. I am not denying that watching live music can 
                  be an enjoyable experience or that a caught-on-the-wing, risk-taking 
                  live performance can be utterly thrilling. That excitement is 
                  caused by what one hears, not by what one sees from the 
                  stalls. So why watch a filmed concert at all, rather than listening 
                  to it on CD or the radio from a far better quality audio-only 
                  source? What can we benefit from seeing?  
                   
                  The most likely answer, it seems to me, is that we can profit 
                  most from watching what, before cameras got onto and behind 
                  the stage, only the orchestra could see: how the conductor uses 
                  his technical and artistic skills to coax a performance from 
                  his players. That is, after all, what almost all professionally 
                  filmed concerts, with cameras lingering lovingly on the conductor's 
                  hands and facial expressions, do. It seems hardly necessary 
                  to point out that the - logically justifiable - alternative 
                  of filming from the real concert hall audience’s perspective 
                  would result in DVDs what replicated all those rather sad YouTubevideos 
                  shot on camera phones from the far distance of the back row. 
                   
                     
                  That conclusion suggests, then, that the best reason to watch 
                  concerts on DVD is to study top-flight conductors at work. There 
                  is a great deal of material on offer. Just to take “Golden 
                  Age” examples, Toscanini, Mengelberg, Talich, Stokowski, 
                  Reiner, Munch, Szell, Leinsdorf and Karajan all spring to mind. 
                  The two Teldec DVDs The Art of Conducting are sources 
                  of both rare historic material and constant artistic illumination. 
                   
                     
                  While that may be the best reason to watch concerts on 
                  DVD, it is not the only one. So while these three conveniently-boxed 
                  discs of Dvořák's music, as performed in a series 
                  of concerts in the Alte Oper Frankfurt in 1993, may not provide 
                  as much food for musical thought as one featuring one of the 
                  conductors listed above, they do undeniably offer experiences 
                  that are simply very enjoyable.  
                     
                  All three of the conductors represented here are Czech and completely 
                  at home in Dvořák’s idiom. Moreover, two of 
                  them had, when these recordings were made, already enjoyed a 
                  close association with the Prague Symphony Orchestra: Jiri Bělohlávek 
                  had been its principal conductor from 1977 until 1990, after 
                  which Petr Altrichter had taken up the reins for a couple of 
                  years.  
                     
                  The first disc is directed by Bělohlávek - even 
                  though it’s said to be Altrichter on the rear of the box 
                  - and gives us a well-played if rather strait-laced account 
                  of the seventh symphony. That is followed by the second set 
                  of Slavonic Dances in a far more relaxed and unbuttoned performance, 
                  though one that only manages to hint at the musical depths unearthed 
                  by Vaclav Talich in a superb televised performance with the 
                  Czech Philharmonic Orchestra from 1955 (available on Supraphon 
                  DVD SU7010-9). Czech violinist Ivan Zenaty brings the disc to 
                  a close with a winning account of the admittedly rather slight 
                  Romance for violin and orchestra op.11.  
                     
                  The disc 2 performances headed up by Altrichter are of the eighth 
                  symphony and the piano concerto.  
                     
                  Reversing the Arthaus Musik marketing department’s billing, 
                  the concerto is positioned first on the disc, just as one imagines 
                  it was in the concert. Czech pianist Igor Ardašev, still 
                  in his 20s when this concert was filmed, displays a rather detached 
                  and undemonstrative stage presence. That is immediately belied 
                  by his warm, flowing performance of the concerto’s solo 
                  part. This account is, in fact, anything but detached: Ardašev 
                  is clearly fully engaged with the work and is ably supported 
                  by a strong and idiomatic contribution from the orchestra. Even 
                  though the concerto lacks the obvious Dvorak “big tune” 
                  that gives, say, the New World symphony or the cello 
                  concerto their popular appeal, a performance like this one demonstrates 
                  what a great shame it is that it remains so rarely heard. Petr 
                  Altrichter’s distinctive account of the symphony is hardly 
                  less successful. Lively, well-sprung rhythms emphasise the innate 
                  Slavonic liveliness that is the score’s most obvious characteristic. 
                  The conductor also ensures that its occasional darker and more 
                  dramatic hues, harking back to the seventh symphony, also emerge 
                  powerfully and to great effect.  
                     
                  Although the New World is billed first on the packaging, 
                  the set's third disc actually opens with the Cello Concerto. 
                  Superbly technically assured, soloist Mischa Maisky crouches 
                  over his instrument so closely that they sometimes almost seem 
                  joined into a single entity. His intensely dramatic account, 
                  full of insight and authority from his very first entry, very 
                  understandably goes down a storm with the capacity Frankfurt 
                  audience. I imagine that Libor Pešek has conducted the 
                  New World - something of a natural calling-card for Czech 
                  conductors - on very many occasions, but the performance here 
                  is fresh and invigorating from the opening bar and takes nothing 
                  for granted. To their great credit, the Prague musicians - who 
                  impressed me very much on all three discs in this set - respond 
                  with equal enthusiasm, making for an altogether enjoyable 42 
                  minutes or so that seems to pass much more quickly. 
                   
                  From a technical point of view, things are very well done indeed 
                  by what seems to be an expert technical crew - presumably largely 
                  British, if the names on the final credits are a guide. The 
                  sound reproduction is well integrated yet clear enough to hear 
                  fine individual detail. Camera shots are judiciously chosen 
                  with close regard for the scores' requirements. The stage lighting 
                  is also well judged, retaining a concert hall atmosphere while 
                  ensuring that we are offered the best visual experience. Indeed, 
                  viewers of a more delicate sensibility may find the images rather 
                  too detailed once or twice, as we clearly see drops of sweat 
                  falling repeatedly from the visibly overheated Petr Altrichter’s 
                  brow.  
                     
                  I had just one small post-production quibble, though I concede 
                  that it may be peculiar to my own TV/DVD set-up. The booklet 
                  notes list an opening track of a minute or so on each disc before 
                  the first track of music: I presume that was for an opening 
                  title sequence and the arrival of the conductor and soloist 
                  on stage. For some reason, my DVD player automatically skipped 
                  that, as well as any menu, and just began the first track of 
                  music with no further ado which was a little annoying. It may 
                  well be that your own player will behave rather better: in any 
                  case, the glitch was certainly not enough to spoil the overall 
                  enjoyment that Dvorak’s scores - and these discs - offer 
                  in such generous abundance.  
                     
                  Rob Maynard     
                see also review of DVD 1 (Symphony 7) by John 
                  Sheppard and DVD 2 (Symphony 8) by Colin 
                  Clarke 
                Masterwork Index: Cello 
                  concerto ~~ Symphony 
                  7 ~~ Symphony 
                  8 ~~ Symphony 
                  9 
                   
                   
                 
             
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