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Sergei Taneyev (1856-1915)
Symphony No. 3 in D minor (1884) [42:05]
Symphony No. 1 in E minor (1874) [33:45]
Novosibirsk Academic
Symphony Orchestra/Thomas Sanderling
rec. Studio of West Siberian Radio, Novosibirsk, Russia. 10-14
September 2006.
NAXOS 8.570336 [75:50]  |
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This disc is the
first in a promised series from Naxos of the complete orchestral
music of Taneyev - also including the four cantatas. With the
discs by Polyansky of the four symphonies, the Piano Concerto
on Toccata and the re-release of the composer’s quartets and
quintets from Northern Flowers - not to mention the promised
quartets on Naxos - we seem to be living in a golden age of
recordings for Taneyev enthusiasts. Even five years ago one
would not have imagined competing discs of the symphonies -
see Rob Barnett’s reviews of the Polyansky versions of Symphonies
1 & 3 (see review)
and 2 & 4 (see review).
On this disc the
third symphony precedes the first, but we will follow the usual
order. The Symphony No. 1 was written when the composer was
18 years old and already shows complete mastery of form and
orchestration. It also shows that while influenced by his teacher
Tchaikovsky, Taneyev was already developing a technical and
musical personality of his own. The opening movement is quite
serious and betrays the interest in counterpoint and linear
development in general for which the composer would become
known. Sanderling handles this movement in a more relaxed manner
than Polyansky and I think it loses something therefore. While
definitely Russian in feeling it also has a slight melancholy
that reminds one of the composer’s contemporary Elgar. The
Andantino is more like something from a Tchaikovsky ballet,
but again there’s a lot more attention to counterpoint. Here
Sanderling provides a smooth flow to the movement that is very
appropriate. The scherzo is in mazurka rhythm and even the
trio never completely strays from this time-signature. The
last movement shows the young composer moving further and further
away from his great teacher. In addition to the contrapuntal
element already discussed, there is a big folk influence here.
The development is well carried out, but overdone. Again I
felt that Polyansky made it more exciting than Sanderling does.
The Symphony No.
3 was written ten years later and is the work of a fully mature
composer with the contrapuntal and folkloric elements integrated
with a full technical equipment and an occasional sense of
whimsy. Sanderling does a good job of bringing out this particular
aspect. The opening allegro is reminiscent of the same movement
in the Symphony No. 2 and we see a very capable development
of the basic material with subsidiary lines developed from
the same. There are also serene moments along with serious
and folksy. The scherzo shows wonderful writing for the winds
followed by a charming trio deriving from the scherzo material.
Most original is the slow movement. This continues the serenity
of the previous trio with occasional Schumannesque undercurrents.
I was reminded of the description of the composer at home in
Bruno Walter’s autobiography. Like it’s counterpart in Symphony
No. 2 the last movement is folk-inspired, almost dance-like,
but with canonic devices to produce a segmental development
that is very effective. Sanderling is not as forceful as Polyansky
in this last movement.
Obviously, the
main basis of comparison for this disc is the counterpart recording
on Chandos. Polyansky is a more forceful conductor and has
the benefit of better recording. Sanderling brings out more
of the inner Taneyev in his performances - a side of the composer
better-known to those familiar with his chamber music. In terms
of recording the engineers at Chandos do a much better job
- witness the high winds in the last movement of the Symphony
No. 1. These are almost screeching on the Naxos disc, but not
a problem on the Chandos. There are also reverberation problems
on the Naxos recording. Similar issues occur with the Symphony
No. 3. It must be pointed out that the Novosibirsk Academic
Symphony Orchestra plays with a lot of enthusiasm and that
their string section is first rate. Their winds are good too
when the engineers allow them. Actually, the true fan will
want to have both the Polyansky and Sanderling discs, others
more concerned with recording quality will choose the former
and those with budgetary concerns the latter.
William Kreindler
see also review by Dan Morgan
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