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Sergei Prokofiev
Piano Concerto No. 1-3
Martha Argerich, piano
Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor

Samuel Barber
Orchestral Works and Concertos
Leonard Slatkin, Charles Munch

Rimsky-Korsakov
Evgeny Svetlanov

Beethoven
Symphony No.9
Piano Transcription by Franz Liszt
Konstantin Scherbakov, Piano

Kronos Caravan
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There was a colourization craze a few years back
when early classics were stripped of their black and white image and
“tarted up” with the full rainbow. (Does anyone remember James
Cagney with a pink head in the “improved” Yankee Doodle Dandy, or –
looking like he’d had a bad Max Factor day - a mauve-faced Humphrey
Bogart in The Maltese Falcon?) But like the end of vinyl due to the
emergence of “forever-lasting” digital recordings (“they will never
skip,” wink, wink; nudge, nudge), the modern improvement lacks the
mood and special feel of the original. What fun, then, that,
recently, several films use bits of B&W (e.g. Nolan’s Memento) as a
special effect.
In 1999 Philip Glass composed a new score for the 1931 classic
Dracula. The evidence of his considerable genius being the decisions
to (a) use only a string quartet (b) engage the services of Kronos
Quartet to bring the music to life even as so many lose (not all
permanently, however) theirs. The result brings a whole new meaning
to “Death and the Maiden” and provides considerable pleasure to
movie lover and concertgoer alike.
Glass opts for colours rather than themes in this post-modern
melodramatic rendering, chock-a-block full of Alberti basses.
Arpeggios signal the entry of the living dead; the horse drawn
carriage gallops across the screen with an undercurrent of
syncopation that harkens back to Mozart’s first G Minor Symphony
(No. 25, K. 183); the sinister viola helps the weary traveler,
Renfield (played with a very fine madness by Dwight Frye), up the
Transylvanian steps even as his host declaims “The children of the
night [wolves howling], what music they make!” All of which
contributes to director Ted Browning’s marvellous tone of restrained
horror and stylish after life.
The passage to England, with its charming toy-ship-in-the-barrel
storm effect, features dissonance in the hatches and the constant
glow of Dracula’s penetrating glance. Not surprisingly, the Count
fits in easily at the London Symphony concert (Bela Lugosi’s white
tie and cape rings true with any musician that has come under the
tyranny of a relentless “Master”). The orchestra plugs its way
through Wagner’s Overture to Die Meistersinger Von Nurnberg (nice
touch) as Dracula tricks Dr. Seward (Herbert Bunston) into leaving
his box, the first step towards a drink at his daughter, Mina’s neck
(Helen Chandler, swooning with conviction).
The ensuing sanitarium follies, where the aforementioned Doctor is
teamed up with Prof. Abraham Van Helsing (Edward Van Sloan, who
revels in the misfortune of others and drives the stake home with
zeal), is effectively enhanced by pizzicati and repetitive scales
underscoring the telling line “When was the last time you saw Lucy
after she died?” The music never intrudes on the story, but adds
considerable depth to its spellbinding thrust parry and flow.
For its part, Kronos delivers the eerie soundscape with conviction
and pizzazz, with only an occasional excursion to the dark side of
intonation to quibble about. In some films that are dialogue
challenged or musically troubled, the result can be greatly improved
if the sound is switched off. With Dracula, the opposite is true –
thank goodness the Glass’ score is available on Nonesuch (79542). Be
sure to place one in your crypt today and save it for the next dark
and stormy night.
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