Billed as
Joe Zawinul's First Symphony, this large-scale classical work may seem like a radical departure to the composer/keyboardist's jazz and pop fans, but it is really a logical expression of
Zawinul's indestructible European roots. Moreover, it is not as alien to his jazz work as one might suppose; at times, one can hear trademark
Zawinul ostinato lines in fleshed-out, orchestrated form, and rhythms and tunes of his jazz-rock days ("Doctor Honoris Causa," "Pharoah's Dance," "Unknown Soldier") turn up like old friends crashing a black-tie ceremony. The story line of the work is a spinoff of
Smetana's "The Moldau," tracing the path of a river from its springhead through Central Europe and the deep historical currents (the Ottoman Empire, Vienna's Golden Age, World War II, etc.) that its journey suggests.
Zawinul's own keyboards appear most noticeably in the brooding Third World-ish introductions to the fourth and seventh movements, and the Czech State Philharmonic Orchestra (Brno) under
Caspar Richter handles the long symphonic writing smoothly. At 63 minutes, this piece is a real stretch --
Zawinul is dealing with a
Bruckner-ian time span -- and skillful orchestrator, composer, and boundless eclectic that he is, he can't quite fill the huge tapestry consistently. Yet repeated listening reveals a coherent if loose overall structure and some emotional depth; if you work at it, the rewards will come. ~ Richard S. Ginell