BBC Music Magazine

Stravinsky

The Soldier’s Tale

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Richard Katz, Martins Imhangbe, Mark Lockyer (speakers); Musicians of the Hallé/mark Elder Hallé CD HLL 7560 58:12 mins Lockdown’s two major phases saw quite a few filmed performanc­es of The Soldier’s Tale in its original form, by virtue of its limited numbers and a drama that doesn’t necessaril­y require physical contact. The problem is the hybrid itself: a lopsided imbalance of so-so text adapting various Russian-folk Soldier and Devil tales by the Swiss writer Charles-ferdinand Ramuz, and the composer’s gallimaufr­y of styles past and present ingeniousl­y resonating on a mere seven instrument­s (it often sounds like more). The set pieces don’t amplify the text as the best incidental music does, but have a life of their own, so it needs a very charismati­c mix of actors and musicians. One performanc­e was in a class of its own, from the Scottish Chamber Orchestra with Matthew Mcvarish taking all the speaking roles brilliantl­y. This one is better than many by virtue of Jeremy Sams’s creative ‘translatio­n’, but of the three speechifie­rs, only Martins Imhangbe’s Soldier really carries the beacon. It might have been better if the release had been a DVD, for clearly the dramatic scenes were filmed at various locations around Manchester; the radio-play sound effects just about work, but we need more.

The more lurid strains from the Royal March onwards could do with a bit more guiding panache from the conductor, Mark Elder. All the Hallé players are first-rate, with notable singing tone from bassoonist Emily Hultmark, and leader Peter Liang holds the spotlight in the court dances compelling­ly. But by then the dithering narrative has long ceased to interest.

David Nice PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

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