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Maurice Ravel: Daphnis et Chloé (Suite No.
2), Pavane pour une infante défunte, La
Valse, Ma Mère l’Oye, Bolèro |
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Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, conducted
by Paavo Järvi [Telarc SACD-60601].
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May 2004
Russell Lichter |

I spent most of last night with this hybrid
SACD in a state of deep enjoyment and
excitement. Between times, I thought of how I
was going to go about writing this review. Did
I want to listen to other versions of La
Valse, Pavane, Ma Mère l’Oye, and
Bolèro (I have several), make general and
specific comparisons, have my attention caught
by the cadence and tempo of a particular
passage and swap CDs back and forth, while a
grasped for the right words? Or did I want to
write about my immediate experience, without
reference to what other conductors and
orchestras may have done? I’ve opted for the
latter approach.
Recordings of Ravel’s orchestral music are
plentiful. This is easy to understand: in
terms of sheer beauty and evocative magic, it
doesn’t get any better. All of the selections
on this disc are well known, and I have heard
them countless times. There is always the
danger, in a case like this, of approaching
the performance with a lack of freshness and
openness. I needn’t have concerned myself. The
more I listened to this disc, the more
impressed I was. This is a disc that leaves no
room for doubt.
Like all the Telarc hybrids I’ve heard
recently, the sound quality is excellent, very
dynamic with an excellent sound stage. But
what really sets this disc apart is the music
making by Paavo Järvi and the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra. Järvi began his studies in
Estonia and came to the USA when he was 17.
One critic drew attention to the fact that
Järvi studied with Leonard Bernstein, and that
Järvi’s conducting showed the “furious
intensity and bravura panache” of his teacher.
I agree. When Bernstein was on the money, he
was hellfire with an orchestra. And Järvi’s
handling of the CSO is quite extraordinary in
its precision and excitement. It’s as if
everything is working so perfectly that a kind
of sublime ease emerges, the conductor’s hand
directs without any need for iron control. He
brings the orchestra to the point where it is
the music itself that directs their playing,
if that makes any sense.
Nowhere is this more apparent than in La
Valse. Daphnis et Chloé, Ma Mère l’Oye,
all the music on this disc is simply gorgeous
and haunting, but to me La Valse is the
centerpiece of the album. I’ve heard lots of
performances of this music, which is nearly as
ubiquitous as the Pavane, but I have
never heard a performance that so well
captures the ominous ambiguity, the
undercurrent of upheaval, the ironic gaiety,
the frenzy of Ravel’s waltz with such balance,
clarity and ease. I have always favored the
original piano versions over Ravel’s sumptuous
orchestrations, without exception, but Paavo
Järvi’s rendering has changed my mind about
La Valse. This is simply the finest La
Valse I have ever heard.
Ravel’s music always has a powerful evocative
quality for me, but the first time I listened
to La Valse I saw in my mind’s eye a
furious choreography, not at all waltz-like,
only to read in the notes afterward that Ravel
composed La Valse at the behest of
Diaghilev. Diaghilev recognized it for the
masterpiece it surely is, but said “…it is not
a ballet…only the portrait of a ballet.” Ida
Rubinstein, who had also choreographed Bolero,
in 1928, first choreographed it ten years
later, in 1930. Ravel said of La Valse,
“I feel that this work is a kind of apotheosis
of the Viennese waltz, linked in my mind with
the impression of a fantastic whirl of
destiny.”
We welcome any readers comments or suggestions
for other audiophile CD favorites for upcoming
Stereo Times reviews. Please contact
Russelllichter@Stereotimes.com
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