Suk: A Summer's Tale; Scherzo fantastique

The steady increase in recordings of his music has now established Suk as one of the great musical poets of the early 20th century. Too much is made of his affinities with his teacher and father-in-law, Dvorák; for his own part, Dvorák never imposed his personality on his pupils and Suk’s mature music owes him little more than a respect for craft and an extraordinarily well developed ear for orchestral colour.

Our rating

5

Published: January 20, 2012 at 1:18 pm

COMPOSERS: Suk
LABELS: Decca
WORKS: A Summer’s Tale; Scherzo fantastique
PERFORMER: Czech PO/Charles Mackerras
CATALOGUE NO: 466 443-2

The steady increase in recordings of his music has now established Suk as one of the great musical poets of the early 20th century. Too much is made of his affinities with his teacher and father-in-law, Dvorák; for his own part, Dvorák never imposed his personality on his pupils and Suk’s mature music owes him little more than a respect for craft and an extraordinarily well developed ear for orchestral colour. His affinities in the five-movement A Summer’s Tale, completed in 1909 – a magnificent successor to his profound Asrael Symphony – reflect Debussy and parallel the music of his friend Sibelius and Holst, but underpinning the musical language is a profound originality energising both form and timbre.

Mackerras’s recording joins a select band: Šejna’s vintage performance on Supraphon and Pešek’s inspired rendition with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic; his is an equal to them both and the Czech Philharmonic’s playing is both aspiring and inspiring. While their reading is suffused with a feeling for the work’s myriad orchestral colours, they recognise that Suk’s music is much more than atmosphere. In particular they excel in their handling of the drama and overwhelming emotional urgency of this remarkable, big-boned symphonic poem. Jan Smaczny

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