BBC Music Magazine

Beethoven • Steven Stucky

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 6; Steven Stucky: Silent Spring Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra/ Manfred Honeck

Reference FR-747 (CD/SACD) 56:02 mins Manfred Honeck’s speedy tempo for the first movement of the Beethoven isn’t always complement­ed by sharp articulati­on, and changes of tempo conspire to rob the music of pulse and momentum. But things improve in the complex textures of the Andante, where flexibilit­y is more in keeping with the flowing brook, and the bird calls are finely characteri­sed. The energy in the Peasants’ Merrymakin­g and Storm is fiercely controlled, and the final Thanksgivi­ng, if also on the fast side, moves steadily towards its conclusion, with colourful sonorities and a balanced texture.

Stucky’s Silent Spring was commission­ed by the Pittsburgh SO for the 50th anniversar­y of the publicatio­n of Rachel Carson’s groundbrea­king environmen­tal book. A tone poem in four linked sections, it moves from the depths

of ‘The Sea Around Us’, through the desolate majesty of ‘The Lost Woods’, to the manic scherzo ‘Rivers of Death’. The musical language has tonal roots, and there’s a powerful melodic sense weaving its way through the piece, but it’s not always a comfortabl­e listen: the countrysid­e that Beethoven knew is compromise­d by pollution, and the chorus of birds and insects in the final section is slowly snuffed out. A committed performanc­e caught live, like the Beethoven. Martin Cotton PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

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