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SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks|ZENDER: Schumann-Phantasie / Bardo

ZENDER: Schumann-Phantasie / Bardo

Hans Zender

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The front cover image of Hänssler Classics' Hans Zender: Schumann-Phantasie is a late Magritte that looks like a thrift store painting, consisting of a fluffy white cloud placed atop a large crystal goblet with a comparatively squat mountain range in the background. While the front cover looks like a master painting that would nonetheless look at home on the walls of Boston's Museum of Bad Art, the disc inside utilizes a thrift store sensibility to reevaluate a great work of Romantic piano music, Robert Schumann's C major piano Fantasie, Op. 17. Composer/conductor Hans Zender is heard in his cello concerto Bardo (1999) leading the SWR Symphony of Baden-Baden, while Zender's lightly scored, yet large orchestral Schumann-Phantasie is led by Sylvain Cambreling with the SWR Symphony of Freiburg. Bardo is the more interesting of the two works, given its frequent use of quarter-tones, employment of the quarter tone piano and its grounding in the Bardo Thodol (The Tibetan Book of the Dead), whose images Zender claims to have been visualizing in composing this work. Instead of the three-movement structure common to concerti, Zender has opted to create five pairs of solos and tutti that work in direct opposition to one another. The most effective part of Bardo is in the Tutti III, an extended section where the strings and clarinet glide around in quarter-tone complexes. It sounds a lot like a passage in the "comedy" Allegretto of Charles Ives' Fourth Symphony, and you will wonder if Ives didn't do it a little better, but it still pricks up one's ears. Other promising quarter-tone moments are abruptly broken off to make room for typically violently agitated, mid-century contemporary music clichés, such as the snapping, "organizing" woodblock from Xenakis works as Pithoprakta and Akrata, definitely overdone here. Soloist Heinrich Schiff has his work cut out for him, and saws away mercilessly on his cello; at one point, Schiff makes a sound on his instrument that's like someone dragging and slapping a wet head of lettuce along the surface of a washboard. The recording quality of Schumann-Phantasie is significantly inferior to that of Bardo, even though only four months and two cities separate them; it is much quieter and lacking in dynamic presence in Freiburg. Zender writes, "We do not take evidence of our cultural past seriously until we can refer it to our contemporary feel for life …if we do not expose it to the shock of a direct confrontation with a modern entity, then we isolate it in the noncommittal domain of a museum where it can delight us without causing any problems." Of all the self-important, post-modernist gobbledygook that has come out of European composers, this must take the cake -- it is absolutely untrue that we MUST subject past masterworks to a "confrontation" with the language of modernism in order to take them "seriously." The technique of modeling on or quoting older music in new is merely a technique, and one that goes back at least to Pérotin's time -- sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. It doesn't work much of the time in Schumann-Phantasie, where Zender orchestrates Schumann's C major piano Fantasie, Op. 17, inserts a prelude and two interludes, and then begins erasing away sections of his orchestration. Some interesting orchestral timbres emerge from this gradual subtraction of measures and instruments, but the interludes consist mostly of static chords with a few stray figures of the Schumann dropped in for good measure -- listeners will find themselves looking at their watches. The work as a whole is underpowered and lacking in impact; though admittedly SWR's anemic recording doesn't help much. The best that can be said about Schumann-Phantasie is that it is neither as offensive nor annoying as Zender's reinvention of Schubert's Winterreise, where he added to the music rather than subtracted. If Zender wants to write tonal music, he should do so, and not shoulder half the blame for the flopping of his cake in the oven with composers such as Schubert and Schumann simply because he derived some ingredients from them. One must admit, though, that as a disc there is no denying that Hänssler Classics' Hans Zender: Schumann-Phantasie is thought provoking and, in a way, challenging, owing to its apparent wrong-headedness, seeming lack of relevance, and slavish devotion to the now prosaic devices of the post-World War II avant-garde. Does it matter? You be the judge.
© TiVo

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ZENDER: Schumann-Phantasie / Bardo

SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks

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Schumann - Phantasie (Hans Zender)

1
Praludium
SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks
00:03:44

Sylvain Cambreling, Conductor - Hans Zender, Composer - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra, MainArtist

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

2
I. Ruinen (After Schumann: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 17: I. Durchaus phantastisch und leidenschaftlich vorgetragen)
SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks
00:13:14

Sylvain Cambreling, Conductor - Hans Zender, Composer - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra, MainArtist

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

3
Interludium I
SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks
00:02:11

Sylvain Cambreling, Conductor - Hans Zender, Composer - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra, MainArtist

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

4
II. Triumphbogen (After Schumann: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 17: II. Massig. Durchaus energisch)
SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks
00:08:44

Sylvain Cambreling, Conductor - Hans Zender, Composer - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra, MainArtist

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

5
Interludium II
SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks
00:03:12

Sylvain Cambreling, Conductor - Hans Zender, Composer - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra, MainArtist

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

6
III. Sternennacht (After Schumann: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 17: III. Langsam getragen. Durchweg leise zu halten)
SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks
00:13:46

Sylvain Cambreling, Conductor - Hans Zender, Composer - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra, MainArtist

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

Bardo (Hans Zender)

7
Bardo: Solo I
Hans Zender
00:01:59

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

8
Bardo: Tutti I
Hans Zender
00:01:42

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

9
Bardo: Solo II
Hans Zender
00:02:01

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

10
Bardo: Tutti II
Hans Zender
00:02:45

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

11
Bardo: Solo III
Hans Zender
00:02:15

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

12
Bardo: Tutti III
Hans Zender
00:02:14

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

13
Bardo: Solo IV
Hans Zender
00:02:34

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

14
Bardo: Tutti IV
Hans Zender
00:01:43

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

15
Bardo: Solo V
Hans Zender
00:02:31

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

16
Bardo: Tutti V
Hans Zender
00:02:48

Heinrich Schiff, Artist, MainArtist - Hans Zender, Composer, Conductor - SWR Sinfonieorchester des Südwestrundfunks, Orchestra

(C) 2006 SWR Classic (P) 2006 SWR Classic

Approfondimenti

The front cover image of Hänssler Classics' Hans Zender: Schumann-Phantasie is a late Magritte that looks like a thrift store painting, consisting of a fluffy white cloud placed atop a large crystal goblet with a comparatively squat mountain range in the background. While the front cover looks like a master painting that would nonetheless look at home on the walls of Boston's Museum of Bad Art, the disc inside utilizes a thrift store sensibility to reevaluate a great work of Romantic piano music, Robert Schumann's C major piano Fantasie, Op. 17. Composer/conductor Hans Zender is heard in his cello concerto Bardo (1999) leading the SWR Symphony of Baden-Baden, while Zender's lightly scored, yet large orchestral Schumann-Phantasie is led by Sylvain Cambreling with the SWR Symphony of Freiburg. Bardo is the more interesting of the two works, given its frequent use of quarter-tones, employment of the quarter tone piano and its grounding in the Bardo Thodol (The Tibetan Book of the Dead), whose images Zender claims to have been visualizing in composing this work. Instead of the three-movement structure common to concerti, Zender has opted to create five pairs of solos and tutti that work in direct opposition to one another. The most effective part of Bardo is in the Tutti III, an extended section where the strings and clarinet glide around in quarter-tone complexes. It sounds a lot like a passage in the "comedy" Allegretto of Charles Ives' Fourth Symphony, and you will wonder if Ives didn't do it a little better, but it still pricks up one's ears. Other promising quarter-tone moments are abruptly broken off to make room for typically violently agitated, mid-century contemporary music clichés, such as the snapping, "organizing" woodblock from Xenakis works as Pithoprakta and Akrata, definitely overdone here. Soloist Heinrich Schiff has his work cut out for him, and saws away mercilessly on his cello; at one point, Schiff makes a sound on his instrument that's like someone dragging and slapping a wet head of lettuce along the surface of a washboard. The recording quality of Schumann-Phantasie is significantly inferior to that of Bardo, even though only four months and two cities separate them; it is much quieter and lacking in dynamic presence in Freiburg. Zender writes, "We do not take evidence of our cultural past seriously until we can refer it to our contemporary feel for life …if we do not expose it to the shock of a direct confrontation with a modern entity, then we isolate it in the noncommittal domain of a museum where it can delight us without causing any problems." Of all the self-important, post-modernist gobbledygook that has come out of European composers, this must take the cake -- it is absolutely untrue that we MUST subject past masterworks to a "confrontation" with the language of modernism in order to take them "seriously." The technique of modeling on or quoting older music in new is merely a technique, and one that goes back at least to Pérotin's time -- sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. It doesn't work much of the time in Schumann-Phantasie, where Zender orchestrates Schumann's C major piano Fantasie, Op. 17, inserts a prelude and two interludes, and then begins erasing away sections of his orchestration. Some interesting orchestral timbres emerge from this gradual subtraction of measures and instruments, but the interludes consist mostly of static chords with a few stray figures of the Schumann dropped in for good measure -- listeners will find themselves looking at their watches. The work as a whole is underpowered and lacking in impact; though admittedly SWR's anemic recording doesn't help much. The best that can be said about Schumann-Phantasie is that it is neither as offensive nor annoying as Zender's reinvention of Schubert's Winterreise, where he added to the music rather than subtracted. If Zender wants to write tonal music, he should do so, and not shoulder half the blame for the flopping of his cake in the oven with composers such as Schubert and Schumann simply because he derived some ingredients from them. One must admit, though, that as a disc there is no denying that Hänssler Classics' Hans Zender: Schumann-Phantasie is thought provoking and, in a way, challenging, owing to its apparent wrong-headedness, seeming lack of relevance, and slavish devotion to the now prosaic devices of the post-World War II avant-garde. Does it matter? You be the judge.
© TiVo

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