
Bedrich Smetana | Geoffrey Simon, LSO | Chandos | 2001
by Michael Lyons, Music Director
It was Antonin Dvorak who stated, âI am a Slavonic composer, Smetana is a Czech composer.â Indeed, it is Smetanaâs beautifully dramatic portrayal of the Moldau that we all know and love, and probably his greatest lasting musical claim to fame. And as an adult I learned this score more than any other portrayed the true Czech spirit.
Hoever, I am proud to say that I am among the many who, as a kid, first encountered âClassicalâ music (specifically orchestral classical music) through my many hours invested in soaking up the Saturday morning cartoons. Ah, those wonderful Warner Bros. soundtracksâendless and seamless-- Carl Stalling is a musical genious in his own right. Can you begin to imagine how dull it would have been to watch Wiley chase the Roadrunner without Smetana to propel him along in his relentless futility. Think, for example, of the opening scene of Chariots of Fire without Vangelisâas pointed out in the Oscars show in 1981 it was just guys in underwear running on the beach.
Here is the absolutely best-sounding recording ever made of the famous chase musicâThe Dance of the Comedians from The Bartered Bride. A nice big-bottomed soundâfull, resonant, with no distortionâperfect for turning your ACME stereo up on the weekend without damaging your ACME speakers as you harness yourself into whatever new gadget you have just received from UPS. The Overture and other national dances that make up The Bartered Bride portion of this CD are equally impressive. Fast and furious are the strings and woodwinds, big and boisterous is the brass sectionâand the most plump sounding timpani ever recorded.
As you wind down from speeding around your living room you will enjoy the rich and dramatic String Quartet in E- (From My Life). This is the famous orchestration made by George Szell and allows the strings of the LSO to come to centre stage, beautifully supported by the rest of the orchestra. This hugely dramatic music, very much programme music in that it portrays the composerâs own life and struggle, is again brilliantly performed. For Smetana, who like Beethoven, lost his most treasured sense - the sub-titles of the four movements say it all. âRomantic longing and foreboding misfortune.â âThe merriment of youth:my love of dancing and dance music.â âMemories of the happiness of my first love.â âJoy in discovering how to treat Bohemian national elements in music: the catastrophe of deafness: reminiscence of happier days: and resignation.â
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