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ZT: Review on Lang Lang's new recording of Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No.2

本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛作者:David Hurwitz

These performances, when they aren't truly boring, are just bad. Take the opening of the Second Concerto: it should be played in tempo, and evenly, evoking the steady tolling of bells. That is what Rachmaninov wrote, and given some natural leeway for interpretive license, that's what virtually all pianists do. Does Lang Lang understand this? He's twice as slow as the ensuing allegro (at least), hits the fortissimo too early, can't seem to make up his mind how long each note should last, and as for the ritard before the entrance of the orchestra, well, forget it. When the violins come in with the principal theme, he pounds away at the keyboard like Wagner's Nibelheim anvils, seemingly unaware of the fact that his part is (as so often in this concerto) mere accompaniment. Of course he couldn't get out of the way if he wanted too. DG's garish and ugly engineering has ensured that. At the end of the first and last movements he's miked louder than the entire orchestra, and rapid passages come replete with the steady clicking of his fingernails on the keyboard (in the left channel, if you care).

That opening is, alas, a portent of dreadful things to come. The first movement recapitulation has seldom sounded so heavy and lacking in thrust, and Gergiev certainly doesn't help, getting into the act with plenty of mannered ritards and strange underlinings of his own. The adagio might have been attractive, had it not been for excruciating playing from the orchestra's flute and clarinet soloists, but the finale is all but unendurable. Not only is it possibly the slowest on disc, the "big tune" has seldom been phrased so flatly, with so little sense of rapture, while the central fugato is a mess, the balances between soloist and orchestra positively inimical to the sense of the music. With an overall duration of more than 36 minutes in a work usually considerably fleeter, comparison with Richter (also on DG) is instructive. He's also quite deliberate (though not to this degree), particularly in the first movement, but the proportions are invariably correct, the long line preserved, and he knows when to take the spotlight and when to yield to his colleagues. In short, Lang Lang's performance is a disaster.

The Paganini Rhapsody fares no better. There seems to be no guiding intelligence at work here at all, and I don't mean that Lang Lang is not intelligent or talented. I refuse to believe that his career is entirely a media creation, as some have claimed, and I was impressed by much of his Carnegie Hall debut concert. His Rachmaninov Third Concerto (on Telarc) was decent. He just doesn't reveal any of his more positive qualities on this outing. Let me explain with some concrete examples: The first four variations are all in the same tempo, Allegro vivace. So are variations eight and nine. They don't sound it, at least as compared to Variation 13. This brings back the opening theme almost literally, and it's marked simply Allegro, but here it's noticably livelier than the original Tempo 1, which is exactly what Rachmaninov does not want, because he plans to leave room to speed up even further for the Scherzando variation fifteen (whose Più vivo directive Lang Lang largely ignores).

What this lack of long-term structural planning reveals is an interpretation either tedious and insufficiently contrasted, as in much of the work's first half, or fragmented and disorganized thereafter. Lang Lang and Gergiev turn the piece into a series of disconnected vignettes, with little sense of continuity and no sustained tension. Listen to how flatly the first appearance of the Dies Irae tune comes across in variation seven, or to the interminable crawl--complete with a loud, theatrical gasp--through the Moderato of variation eleven. Then there's the positively awful moment in the Tempo di menuetto variation twelve where the piano and clarinet stop the music dead in its tracks. Ultimately Lang Lang's mannerisms, the frequent ritards and phrase distensions, become boringly predictable, a parody of "Golden Age" Romantic expressiveness. Even the timing between some of the variations seems slightly off, perhaps the result of poor editing.


As suggested above, Gergiev and his orchestra, not the best of bands on a good day, sound far from comfortable here. Aside from the terrible woodwind soloists and iffy sectional balances (never mind the absurdly dominant piano), the strings sound both undernourished and scruffy (try variation fourteen, or the famous eighteenth, and you'll hear what I mean immediately). I've seldom heard the orchestral component played so casually by a Russian orchestra, or conducted with so little passion. Add to this the bad sonics, and an embarrassing booklet photo spread of Lang Lang--rolling around on the beach in a metallic blue jacket--that would have made Liberace blush, and the result is very hard to take seriously. I hesitate to use the inherently subjective term "tasteless," but if it has any meaning at all, then this release could serve as a textbook definition.

Clearly Lang Lang, for all his technical facility, is not ready to commit these pieces to disc, nor quite frankly should DG be encouraging him to do so much so quickly if this is typical of what we can expect in future. Whether the cause is immaturity or poor judgment occasioned by a lack of access to constructive criticism, the result here is unacceptable. Part of the blame must also rest squarely with producer Martin Engstroem. It is simply inconceivable that a Max Wilcox, or a Walter Legge, or one of the discerning recording professionals of decades past would permit performances of such poor quality to be released on a major label. I wonder if there is anyone out there today with the guts and artistic integrity to simply say "No, this isn't good enough. We are dropping the project here and now." The cheesy production values, lousy sound, and spasmodic artistry on offer here are unworthy both of DG and the performers, and that's the bottom line.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
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  • 枫下拾英 / 乐韵书香 / ZT: Review on Lang Lang's new recording of Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No.2
    本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛作者:David Hurwitz

    These performances, when they aren't truly boring, are just bad. Take the opening of the Second Concerto: it should be played in tempo, and evenly, evoking the steady tolling of bells. That is what Rachmaninov wrote, and given some natural leeway for interpretive license, that's what virtually all pianists do. Does Lang Lang understand this? He's twice as slow as the ensuing allegro (at least), hits the fortissimo too early, can't seem to make up his mind how long each note should last, and as for the ritard before the entrance of the orchestra, well, forget it. When the violins come in with the principal theme, he pounds away at the keyboard like Wagner's Nibelheim anvils, seemingly unaware of the fact that his part is (as so often in this concerto) mere accompaniment. Of course he couldn't get out of the way if he wanted too. DG's garish and ugly engineering has ensured that. At the end of the first and last movements he's miked louder than the entire orchestra, and rapid passages come replete with the steady clicking of his fingernails on the keyboard (in the left channel, if you care).

    That opening is, alas, a portent of dreadful things to come. The first movement recapitulation has seldom sounded so heavy and lacking in thrust, and Gergiev certainly doesn't help, getting into the act with plenty of mannered ritards and strange underlinings of his own. The adagio might have been attractive, had it not been for excruciating playing from the orchestra's flute and clarinet soloists, but the finale is all but unendurable. Not only is it possibly the slowest on disc, the "big tune" has seldom been phrased so flatly, with so little sense of rapture, while the central fugato is a mess, the balances between soloist and orchestra positively inimical to the sense of the music. With an overall duration of more than 36 minutes in a work usually considerably fleeter, comparison with Richter (also on DG) is instructive. He's also quite deliberate (though not to this degree), particularly in the first movement, but the proportions are invariably correct, the long line preserved, and he knows when to take the spotlight and when to yield to his colleagues. In short, Lang Lang's performance is a disaster.

    The Paganini Rhapsody fares no better. There seems to be no guiding intelligence at work here at all, and I don't mean that Lang Lang is not intelligent or talented. I refuse to believe that his career is entirely a media creation, as some have claimed, and I was impressed by much of his Carnegie Hall debut concert. His Rachmaninov Third Concerto (on Telarc) was decent. He just doesn't reveal any of his more positive qualities on this outing. Let me explain with some concrete examples: The first four variations are all in the same tempo, Allegro vivace. So are variations eight and nine. They don't sound it, at least as compared to Variation 13. This brings back the opening theme almost literally, and it's marked simply Allegro, but here it's noticably livelier than the original Tempo 1, which is exactly what Rachmaninov does not want, because he plans to leave room to speed up even further for the Scherzando variation fifteen (whose Più vivo directive Lang Lang largely ignores).

    What this lack of long-term structural planning reveals is an interpretation either tedious and insufficiently contrasted, as in much of the work's first half, or fragmented and disorganized thereafter. Lang Lang and Gergiev turn the piece into a series of disconnected vignettes, with little sense of continuity and no sustained tension. Listen to how flatly the first appearance of the Dies Irae tune comes across in variation seven, or to the interminable crawl--complete with a loud, theatrical gasp--through the Moderato of variation eleven. Then there's the positively awful moment in the Tempo di menuetto variation twelve where the piano and clarinet stop the music dead in its tracks. Ultimately Lang Lang's mannerisms, the frequent ritards and phrase distensions, become boringly predictable, a parody of "Golden Age" Romantic expressiveness. Even the timing between some of the variations seems slightly off, perhaps the result of poor editing.


    As suggested above, Gergiev and his orchestra, not the best of bands on a good day, sound far from comfortable here. Aside from the terrible woodwind soloists and iffy sectional balances (never mind the absurdly dominant piano), the strings sound both undernourished and scruffy (try variation fourteen, or the famous eighteenth, and you'll hear what I mean immediately). I've seldom heard the orchestral component played so casually by a Russian orchestra, or conducted with so little passion. Add to this the bad sonics, and an embarrassing booklet photo spread of Lang Lang--rolling around on the beach in a metallic blue jacket--that would have made Liberace blush, and the result is very hard to take seriously. I hesitate to use the inherently subjective term "tasteless," but if it has any meaning at all, then this release could serve as a textbook definition.

    Clearly Lang Lang, for all his technical facility, is not ready to commit these pieces to disc, nor quite frankly should DG be encouraging him to do so much so quickly if this is typical of what we can expect in future. Whether the cause is immaturity or poor judgment occasioned by a lack of access to constructive criticism, the result here is unacceptable. Part of the blame must also rest squarely with producer Martin Engstroem. It is simply inconceivable that a Max Wilcox, or a Walter Legge, or one of the discerning recording professionals of decades past would permit performances of such poor quality to be released on a major label. I wonder if there is anyone out there today with the guts and artistic integrity to simply say "No, this isn't good enough. We are dropping the project here and now." The cheesy production values, lousy sound, and spasmodic artistry on offer here are unworthy both of DG and the performers, and that's the bottom line.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • 硬着头皮读完了,大至上是懂了,能否再给点背景,包扩作者的介绍,多谢板爷。
      • 如果我没记错的话,Hurwitz是amazon.com的特邀编辑/评论员,很多amazon官方review都是他写的。
    • 唉, 我已经用小石子打过Lang Lang了, 现在看来砸他的砖头还不少, 弄得我都有点同情他了.
      • 成也媒体,败也媒体。Too much hype. Lang Lang could have been a great-pianist-in-the-making with lots of potential. 现在看来, he's little more than a spoiled kid. 个人观点。
    • 再看看这则评论~~
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛转载某乐迷写的评论:


      我刚买到这张唱片,来谈谈自己的感受吧。

      首先是录音非常好,几乎听不出是现场录音。钢琴的音色好,乐队的音色表现得比较厚重,和以往印象中俄国乐团的音色差异很大。

      从演绎方面来看,这个版本在不少段落的速度方面处理得比较奇特。比如一开始的钟声主题非常的缓慢,而且渐强的效果非常突出,或者应该说是被夸大了吧。也许这种处理并不符合作曲家的本意,我倒觉得它所带来的震撼感是在很多其他版本中不常见的。另外第三乐章的整体速度也比较拖沓,一开始乐队的演奏就有疲软的感觉,缺乏应有的那种冲击力度,倒是接下来郎朗的华彩段十分精彩夺目,也许有人会说他在这里过于炫技了吧。然而令我略微吃惊的是第二主题乐队和钢琴都处理得过于冷淡了,或者说少了些应有的激情,(本来第二主题的出现是第三乐章情绪上的一大转折,应该给人眼前一亮的感觉)而且几处渐强处乐队的处理都有点突兀,不太自然。第三乐章的结尾处,乐队终于爆发出了压抑已久的激情,所幸在这里钢琴的声音并没有被夸大,录音的平衡把握的不错。这个我听到的不多的真正令人激动不一、辉煌灿烂的尾声之一。个人认为这个版本中最出色的还属第二乐章,当然这从根本上还要归功于Rachmaninov的精彩创作。在这个美唤绝伦的乐章中,长笛和单簧管的对话简直是美得令人窒息,应该说这里的管乐独奏还是令人满意的。郎朗演奏最突出的亮点还是在那些华彩段落,真有那中大珠小珠落玉盘的效果。而且这个乐章的速度处理也还算合适。

      对于帕格尼尼主题狂想曲的总体印象也很好,但由于以前听过的其他版本并不多,所以不好评价。唯一觉得不足的是第18变奏(Andante Cantabile)有点稍稍局促了些,完全可以表现得更加宽广些。

      这张唱片发行以来,西方各大媒体对它的评价也是褒贬不一、毁誉参半。我觉得这也是非常正常的现象,毕竟他足以引起我们大家的关注,而不少伟大的演绎同时也是最具争议的。总之我觉得这是一张非常值得聆听的唱片,我们也只有亲自认真聆听后才能作出相应的评价。更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • up!!好贴岂能跌入深谷!!
      • up!!好贴岂能跌入深谷!!