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Saturday, May 29, 2021

Gavriil Popov - Symphony No. 5; Symphonic Suite No. 1 (Gurgen Karapetian; Edvard Chivzhel)


Information

Composer: Gavriil Popov
  • (01) Symphonic Suite No. 1
  • (04) Symphony No. 5 in A major, Op. 77 'Pastoral'

Rimma Glushkova, soprano
Alexander Polyakov, baritone
Moscow Radio & TV Symphony Orchestra
Edvard Chivzhel, conductor (1-3)

USSR State Symphony Orchestra
Gurgen Karapetian, conductor (4, 5)

Date: 1997
Label: Olympia

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Review

The third of Olympia’s Popov issues confirms the strong impressions already established (2/96 and 7/96). Gavriil Popov (1904-72) is the least well-known of the composers singled out as ‘anti-people formalists’ in Zhdanov’s 1948 purge of composers. Unlike some of his currently more fashionable younger compatriots, he claims our attention by virtue of musical qualities alone, quite apart from his victim status.

His is a restlessly inventive spirit, obviously excited by the vividness of his musical encounters (some of them from very unexpected sources by Soviet standards), but never overawed by them and never content with simple-minded recyclings or elaborations. If only his ideas were more tightly drawn together he might well have qualified for the premier league.

The unpretentiously styled Symphonic Suite No. 1 is actually a gorgeous score. It dates from 1933 and derives from Popov’s music to an early Socialist-Realist film snappily titled Komsomol is the Chief of Electrification. The fact that it won the composer a congratulatory telegram from no less than Sergei Eisenstein becomes understandable when you hear its inventive range, from soupy romanticism with wordless soprano and baritone vocalises, to Shostakovichian brooding and a pastiche fugue in the manner of the Magic Flute Overture topped off with a surprisingly convulsive ending.

If the date of composition is really 1956, only three years after Shostakovich’s Tenth, then Popov’s Fifth was an astonishingly liberated statement. Some sources give 1969, but the recording itself is supposedly from 1963, and Per Skans, author of the excellent booklet-essay, is surely right to go with the earlier date.

Notwithstanding its subtitle, the Fifth Symphony comes over as an emotionally painful rhapsody, ecstatic at heart, freely traversing a generally plaintive inner landscape. The first and last of the five movements are subtitled “Pastorale”. In between the journey goes through a brassy “Storm”, a wiry Fugue (“Struggle”), to a remarkably Hollywoodish slow movement (“Hopes”). Alongside the Italianate touches (voluptuous echoes of Puccini and Respighi) I hear a pervasive French influence in the orchestration, Ravel’s Daphnis being never all that far away. More importantly from the point of view of lasting musical satisfaction, Popov manages to keep the structure in a constant state of expectancy, if not quite ideally taut.

Performances are a little raw, but appropriately bold and colourful, and considering the date the recording quality is fine. I’m now keeping my fingers crossed that Olympia can complete this valuable cycle with recordings of Popov’s Third Symphony (for strings and inspired by the Spanish Civil War) and his Fourth (which I’ve yet to encounter in any shape or form).


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Gavriil Popov (12 September 1904 – 17 February 1972) was a Soviet Russian composer. He studied at the Leningrad Conservatory from 1922 until 1930, and was considered to have the raw talent of his contemporary Dmitri Shostakovich. His early works were impressively powerful and forward-looking. Not surprisingly, he ran afoul of the authorities in 1936 and began writing in a more conservative idiom in order to avoid charges of formalism. Despite his alcoholism, Popov produced many works for orchestra, including six completed symphonies and several film scores. He was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1946.

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3 comments:

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  2. oTRO GRAN CICLO, gracias a millones !!!!!!!

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  3. Thank you, Ronald! Excellent and very exciting composer!

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