, JW I/9 (1922-24; suite finally 
    revised by Sir Charles Mackerras, 2008) [20:14]
    rec. 10-12 March 2014, Grieghallen, Bergen, Norway. DSD
    
 This is billed as the first volume in a Janáček 
      series from Bergen. Edward Gardner has been the Bergen Philharmonic’s 
      Principal Guest Conductor since 2013 and will become their Chief Conductor 
      in October 2015.
      
      The series is to cover Janáček’s orchestral music. Arguably, 
      the quirky Capriccio barely scrapes into that category: the very modest 
      scoring is for piano left-hand, flute/piccolo, two trumpets, three trombones 
      and tenor tuba. Yet even with those small forces Janáček, ever resourceful, 
      conjures a wide variety of colours and ear-tickling sonorities. Jean-Efflam 
      Bavouzet is a good soloist; he is dexterous in the first of the four movements 
      and, indeed, throughout. The Bergen ensemble dovetails extremely well, both 
      with him and with each other. In the second movement Janáček’s 
      invention never settles: there are no fewer than thirteen marked tempo indications, 
      and this in a piece lasting just over five minutes. Some of the sonorities 
      that the composer conjures up in the third movement are little short of 
      astonishing given the self-imposed restriction of the small ensemble with 
      which he chose to work. It’s a highly imaginative score and it receives 
      a stimulating performance here.
      
      The 
Sinfonietta is at the other end of the scale: the additional 
      brass players alone pretty much match the total forces required for the 
      Capriccio. Gardner leads a very good performance. He may seem quite swift 
      in the opening fanfares but in fact his tempo is not markedly different 
      from the pace set by other classic interpreters of the score such as Kubelik 
      (
review) 
      or Mackerras. In the second movement Gardner and his players, aided by fine 
      Chandos sound, bring out the wonderful variety of timbres in Janáček’s 
      consistently inventive scoring. Gardner achieves a good lyrical sweep at 
      the start of the third movement and the central quick episode is exciting. 
      I wonder, though, if the end of the movement is not drawn out rather too 
      much. In the final movement Gardner builds up the tension successfully – 
      and maintains good forward momentum – in the build-up to the reprise 
      of the fanfares. Actually, in one sense it’s not a reprise since the 
      Janáček expert, John Tyrrell points out in his notes that the composer 
      only added the opening fanfares to the work after he’d completed it 
      as a four-movement work. Here the closing fanfares are very exciting and 
      jubilant and at the very end the woodwind trills come through superbly over 
      the brass chords. I wonder, however, if Gardner has deliberately held back 
      the brass in order to achieve this effect because on other versions I’ve 
      sampled the balance between the brass and the woodwind at this point is 
      much more in favour of the former.
      
      It’s the making of comparisons that lead me to wonder if, for all 
      its excellence, there isn’t a missing dimension to this Gardner performance. 
      Perhaps it’s partly due to the warm acoustic of the Grieghallen in 
      Bergen but this performance doesn’t have quite the rawness and edge 
      that one hears in two rival performances. One is the classic 1961 Czech 
      Philharmonic/Ančerl recording on Supraphon (SU 1684-2 11).The other, 
      in more modern sound, is a wonderful 2002 live performance in which Sir 
      Charles Mackerras conducts the same orchestra (Supraphon SU 3739-2 032). 
      In both these versions the orchestral sound has a unique tang. There’s 
      a suggestion of rawness – completely authentic – and an earthy 
      quality to the music-making which isn’t quite there in the Bergen 
      performance. Mackerras invests the closing fanfares with more weight and 
      grandeur yet at a speed that’s not significantly different to Gardner’s.
      
      The spirit of Sir Charles hangs over the suite from 
The Cunning Little 
      Vixen too. John Tyrrell explains that when the opera was less warmly 
      received than some of its predecessors Janáček’s publishers proposed 
      the idea of an orchestral suite. The composer never warmed to the idea but 
      after his death they sounded out Václav Talich who was more receptive. He 
      compiled a suite that included most of the music from Act I. However, Talich 
      felt that the characteristically individual orchestration might be a barrier 
      to audience acceptance so, from entirely well-meant if misguided motives, 
      he asked the conductor František Škvor and the composer Jaroslav 
      Řidký to smooth over some of the rough edges in the original scoring. 
      Much later Sir Charles Mackerras took a look at Talich’s suite and 
      restored Janáček’s original orchestration. Furthermore, he added 
      more music to Talich’s suite so that, Tyrrell tells us, only about 
      six minutes of Act I are missing from the suite. The final version of the 
      Mackerras suite, “which included a few minor revisions” is recorded 
      here – for the first time?
      
      Sir Charles died before he could perform his final revision of the suite. However, 
      he did record his version of the suite with the Czech Philharmonic in 2002. 
      It’s included in the same set as the performance of the 
Sinfonietta 
      mentioned above. Without a score it’s impossible to be sure but I 
      rather suspect the differences between what he performed in 2002 and the 
      2008 version are not major. Cast in two movements it’s a splendid piece 
      for orchestra, full of delightful, fresh and beautifully imagined music. 
      Like the other two scores on this disc it shows us what a uniquely inventive 
      orchestrator Janáček was – and one of the many pleasures of Edward 
      Gardner’s perceptively chosen programme is that it demonstrates different 
      facets of Janáček both as a composer and as an orchestrator. This Bergen 
      performance is very engaging – I wonder if Gardner conducted the opera 
      during his time as Music Director of English National Opera. There’s 
      a beguiling range of colours, mostly primary, in this score, and they’re 
      heard to excellent advantage here. That said, the Mackerras recording, once 
      again, brings out the timbres in a different and even more authentic way: 
      the sound of the Czech Philharmonic is not as warm and rounded as that of 
      the Bergen orchestra; they give the music more of an edge.
      
      Comparison with Czech recordings of this music are instructive. They show 
      that these Chandos performances a
re not 
      inferior; rather, they are different. Gardner’s way with Janáček’s 
      music is not the only way – but it’s pretty persuasive. The 
      Bergen Philharmonic offer excellent playing throughout this programme and 
      Chandos have recorded the orchestra in warm but well-detailed and well–focused 
      sound. I listened to the SACD layer of this hybrid discs with very satisfactory 
      results. John Tyrrell’s notes are a model of their kind.
      
      This, I suspect, is going to be a rewarding series to follow and this first 
      disc is an auspicious start. I wonder what will come next. I note that Edward 
      Gardner is conducting the 
Glagolitic Mass in Birmingham and Bergen 
      in March next year so I hope very much that a recording of that blazing 
      masterpiece is on the agenda.
      
      
John 
      Quinn