BBC Music Magazine

Orchestral

Franck ● Chausson

Franck: Symphony in D minor, Chausson: Symphony in B flat major

Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra/Jean-Luc Tingaud

Naxos 8.574536 71:08 mins

The pairing of the Franck and Chausson symphonies is a favourite standby and understandably so: at around 70 minutes they fill a CD and share a musical language.

Conductor Jean-Luc Tingaud understands that the Franck is essentially a work of contrasts, and offers us a wide range of both tempos and dynamics, so that tensions between the two extremes become a guide for the rhetoric. Franck’s long lines are intelligently and variously phrased, so there are no places where the argument flags. The only downside is that, from time to time, the first violins are swamped by the brass.

Tingaud’s performance of the Chausson is more arguable. He has studied the two autographs of the work in the Bibliothèque nationale – the original draft and the copy sent to the printer – but has drawn conclusions from them that must be doubted. For a start proofs, whether accepted or corrected, are missing, so we have no final, definitive text.

Tingaud is undoubtedly right in saying the 1897 published score is not perfect. But he’s wrong to say that Chausson writes ‘crotchet becomes quaver’ when he in fact writes ‘quaver becomes crotchet’, and in any case Tingaud obeys neither instruction, nor does he observe the at the end of the first movement, while I dispute that must be more ‘an indication of character than of tempo’. So what we have is a generally well-played version of this symphony, doing its best to disguise Chausson’s shortwindedness and persistent reliance on chromatic sevenths, which may or may not have the composer’s final  

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine1 min read
Bonang Goes Pythagoras’s Theory Of Numerical Harmony
Did Pythagoras get it wrong? In the 6th century BC, the great polymath showed that certain numerical ratios between sounds are what makes music sound pleasant to us – and dissonance occurs when there’s a deviation from such ratios. But scientists in
BBC Music Magazine2 min read
Three Other Great Recordings
There’s something immensely organic about the way René Jacobs unfolds the narrative’s ineluctable trajectory in his version recorded in 2000. And for a conductor so often associated with a certain operatic flamboyance, some of the ‘agitato’ moments p
BBC Music Magazine3 min read
Ibiza Spain
Headphones adjusted, the conductor raises his arms. Strings twist and turn, the sound swells; electronic vocals ride the crest of the wave. The beat drops. Then, as lights flash across the Royal Albert Hall, glockenspiels duet over a keyboard motif.

Related Books & Audiobooks