Alfred Schnittke: Signs of Life
Alfred Schnittke, who died August 3 in Hamburg at the age of 64 after years of
poor health, was the most celebrated Russian composer of our time. I first
heard about him as the composer of a notorious atonal cadenza for the Beethoven
Violin Concerto that he wrote for the Russian virtuoso Gidon Kremer. Then Peter
Sellars, who is often the first kid on the musical block, incorporated
Schnittke's powerful First String Quartet into the action of his production of
The Count of Monte Cristo, at the Kennedy Center in 1985, with the
musicians on stage with the actors. Ten years ago, Sarah Caldwell brought
Schnittke to Boston as part of "Making Music Together," her Russian festival,
and we got our first real taste of his variety and
inventiveness,
No composer could be more serious, as the somber but
beautiful 12-tone First Quartet suggests. But no serious composer could write
zanier music, either. The difficulty with Schnittke is not that some of his
pieces are long, serious, and spiritually probing whereas others are full of
parodies and jokes -- it's that many are both. Who else would include an
electric guitar in a multi-denominational Soviet Requiem Mass? Maybe that's
what happens when your father's a Russian Jewish atheist and your mother's
German-Russian and Catholic.
The Kronos Quartet recorded Schnittke's Third String Quartet, with its echoes
of Orlando di Lasso, Beethoven's Pathétique Sonata and Grosse
Fuge, and Shostakovich, back in 1987 (on its Winter Was Hard album).
That performance is now part of a new two-disc set, Alfred Schnittke: The
Complete String Quartets (Nonesuch), along with more recent performances of
the First, the elegiac and agitated Second, and the melancholy Fourth. There's
also the brief n in Memory of Igor Stravinsky, from 1971,
and the Kronos's arrangement of the second movement of Schnittke's Concerto
for Mixed Choir -- a section called "Collected Songs Where Every Verse Is
Filled with Grief."
I'm glad the Kronos has come back to Schnittke. Too much of what this group
has recorded I'd call Contemporary Lite -- the new-music version of easy
listening. I want music to be appealing but I don't want it to be thin.
Schnittke's has backbone. And a face. Look at his huge, cadaverous eyes on the
cover of the liner notes. Having suffered multiple strokes, he lived in the
shadow of the valley of death -- though I suspect his sense of grief, and
cheeky laughter in the face of it, was temperamental, not merely medical. The
heavier the demands on the Kronos Quartet, the better it plays, so this is one
of the group's very best recordings.
There are also wonderful new recordings of the Second and Third Quartets by
the Lark Quartet (on Arabesque) that tend to be more spacious in tempo than the
Kronos, less electric, but perhaps warmer. Rounding out the disc is one of
Schnittke's greatest chamber works, the ghostly Piano Quintet, which he
composed in memory of his mother. At the keyboard is no less than Gary Graffman
(playing with both hands). The Quintet's remarkable Andante is a weird waltz,
with the strings wailing in semitones while the piano bounces away. It's
terrifying. And hilarious -- the most moving and extreme example of the way
Schnittke chose to confront life and death in all his music.
-- Lloyd Schwartz