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The "First Suite" as elements of the fairytale about it, especially in its first ("In a Haunted Forest") and last ("Forest Spirits") movements. The notes to the recording speak of the Mendelssohnian quality of the latter movement, but really MacDowell has a heavier hand about him, and despite delicate touches, the suite sounds more like Wagner and Liszt than Mendelssohn--typical MacDowell, that is. Pleasant though the suite is, it could just as easily have been penned by the likes of Raff, Goetz, Joachim, or Bruch (on a bad day) as by the American composer.
The "Second Suite," once highly popular, is meatier and sticks in the mind better. It purports to portray what MacDowell called "the manly free rudeness of the American Indian," though like Dvorak's "American" music, MacDowell's has as much of the Old World about it as the New. Here, that's not such a bad thing, as the level-headed German approach keeps the "Dirge" from sounding maudlin, as it might, and gives heft and profile to the "Legend" and "Village Festival," where the presumably authentic Indian melodies aren't as catchy as MacDowell hoped they'd be. Still, the suite is a fair piece of music and worth hearing whether you're a MacDowell fan or not.
"Hamlet and Ophelia" is interesting because it represents one aspect of MacDowell that isn't widely explored on disc or in performance. The piece started life as two separate character studies that the composer later pieced together. In this form, the work sounds like a minature character symphony a la Liszt's "Faust Symphony." MacDowell's Hamlet is a brash and daring fellow with a tender side, so his music is dramatic, a bit pompous. Ophelia's is about what you would expect--sweetly melancholy. "Hamlet and Ophelia" is a good Germanic tone poem as it stands, but since the ending to Ophelia's section is a quiet one, the piece almost cries out for a more dramatic close. If MacDowell were still around, I'd suggest he take a lesson from his friend Liszt and add a third section on Hamlet's antigonist Claudius, of course tossing in the final swordplay from "Hamlet" for thrills. Maybe even a choral apotheosis of Hamlet, a la Liszt.... But MacDowell isn't around, and probably the whole enterprise would sink of its own weight. So what we have of "Hamlet and Ophelia" will have to do, and it does its job well.
So do Takuo Yuasa and the Ulster Orchestra, an unlikely pair, especially in such German-American fare as this. But Yuasa's sense of drama keeps the music very much alive and, in the case of the "First Suite," even makes it seem better than it is. The players are with him every step of the way, and the recording is quite fine. I recommend this disc.
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