Richard Strauss: Ein Heldenleben; Behzad Ranjbaran: Violin Concerto. Nikki Chooi, violin; Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by JoAnn Falletta. Beau Fleuve. $15.
Music for Marimba: Bach, Debussy, John Zorn and Miho Hazama. Mika Stoltzman, marimba; members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Boston Modern Orchestra Project conducted by Steven Lipsitt and Miho Hazama. AVIE. $19.99.
In the days before there were hundreds of TV channels and an additional surfeit of streaming services, television programmers trying to draw an audience to new shows developed a technique called “hammocking.” This involved placing a new program between two similar established and already popular ones, the reasoning being that people would most likely watch the first show and stay put for the second (new) one so as to be ready to watch the third. Something analogous has long been common practice in concert production: present a new work in the middle of a concert that otherwise includes pieces that the audience already knows and enjoys. More recently, a similar approach has become increasingly common in recordings, despite the relative ease with which listeners can skip little-known material or simply turn off a CD altogether. Still, this combinatorial idea has the potential to make new music more widely accessible, at least giving it a chance to find an audience – provided that the less-known work is paired with a suitable better-known one that may, in and of itself, be attractive enough to tempt listeners. The latest Beau Fleuve recording from the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra under JoAnn Falletta handles this juxtaposition of well-known and less-known quite well – and thanks to the quality of Falletta’s reading (and the orchestra’s playing) of Ein Heldenleben, the CD has real potential to attract people who might not otherwise evince much interest in the violin concerto by Behzad Ranjbaran (born 1955). The Buffalo ensemble is at its best in the grandiose (and, ok, somewhat overdone) self-aggrandizing Richard Strauss tone poem, with rich and elegant brass a standout element and strings filled with warmth and exceptionally tight-knit ensemble playing – along with very fine handling of the solo-violin sections by concertmaster Nikki Chooi. The eventual quiet withdrawal from the world at the tone poem’s end – a deliberate parallel to Strauss’s treatment of the conclusion of Don Quixote, which he considered a companion piece to such an extent that he urged that the two works be programmed together – is handled as elegantly as the many more-dramatic sections of the tone poem. And Chooi’s sweetness throughout, mixed with acerbity when called for, provides just the right contrast with the many internal and external troubles faced by the titular hero. Even listeners who already own Ein Heldenleben, as most target audiences for this CD surely will, may well find this a good enough performance to add to their collection – which of course is what Falletta and the production team hope, since Ranjbaran’s music on its own will not likely be what draws people to the CD. But those who do engage with the recording will find a great deal in the Ranjbaran concerto to like, and not just because Chooi plays it so well – although that is certainly an element of the enjoyment. The 1994 concerto, which here receives its world première recording, was first performed in 2003 by Joshua Bell, to whom the work is dedicated (with Gerard Schwarz conducting). But this late-20th-century piece draws with clarity, intensity and sure knowledge on the orchestral norms of Strauss’s Romantic era. And Ranjbaran’s own training as a violinist shines through everywhere: the music lies very well on the solo instrument, the virtuoso elements – which are considerable – are well-thought-out and never sound arbitrary, and the elements of underlying exoticism in the music complement the work rather than sounding tacked-on. Ranjbaran, born in Iran, has said that the kamancheh, an ancient Persian bowed instrument and distant ancestor of the violin, strongly influenced his thinking when he composed this concerto, and certainly some elements of the music have sounds that evoke Persia. But Ranjbaran is so sure-handed in his use of a large Western orchestra that the concerto seems to partake far more of the Strauss sensibilities of Ein Heldenleben (1898) than of older and more geographically distant realms. The concerto is meticulously constructed along traditional three-movement lines, with themes shared among all the movements giving it a strong feeling of musical cohesion. Above all it is listenable music, clearly having a lot to say and equally clearly wanting the audience to understand just what is being said. There is nothing off-putting in its sound or structure – and Ranjbaran seems genuinely concerned with producing music that reaches out to listeners who might be less than entranced by works seeking mostly to prove how up-to-date they and their composers are. Ranjbaran’s language is primarily tonal but not slavishly so, the concerto’s solo elements are skillfully deployed against the ensemble, and there are even places here and there where the resemblance to Straussian thinking is perhaps a bit overly close (e.g., the cymbal clash midway through the expressive second movement). The pairing of this concerto with Ein Heldenleben turns out to be a most fortunate one, doing exactly what this sort of combinatorial approach is intended to do: offering listeners a very fine performance of a familiar work and an equally fine introduction to a piece that speaks in similar although scarcely identical language – and that owners of this recording will likely return to just as frequently as they come back to Falletta’s first-rate reading of Ein Heldenleben.
Even when well-played, though, recordings mixing familiar and unfamiliar material are not always as successful as Falletta’s, any more than TV “hammocks” invariably conferred popularity on the new shows they were designed to highlight. For example, although Mika Stoltzman gives a series of top-notch performances on the marimba on a new AVIE disc consisting entirely of world première recordings, the material she plays does not quite stand up to repeated hearings – and this short CD seems longer than the 48 minutes it actually runs. The disc is bracketed by two extended works: an arrangement for marimba and strings of Bach’s Chaconne in D minor from Partita No. 2 by Stoltzman and Steven Lipsitt opens the recording, and a concerto written in 2021 by Miho Hazama (born 1986) closes it. It proves to be a bit too long a journey from one of these pieces to the other. The hollow echoing that opens the Bach introduces a sound world that is interesting enough but rather enigmatic, made more so when the ensemble enters. The marimba is front-and-center throughout, and while Bach’s music is certainly performable on instruments of all sorts, it sits less than comfortably on the marimba, whose comparatively hollow and echo-y sound is at odds with Bach’s clarity of line and, for that matter, with the clarity of the strings heard here. The mixture is odd enough to be intriguing for a time, but is ultimately less than convincing despite the skill with which it is presented. The Bach is followed on the disc by a brand-new (2025) work called Breathturn: Part I by John Zorn (born 1953) that gives Stoltzman – here abetted by husband Richard Stoltzman on clarinet and Fred Sherry on cello – a chance to display the marimba in very different guise. Here the clarinet dominates the sound and the marimba produces an underlying undercurrent against which the clarinet – and, to a lesser extent, the cello – can be heard in long, largely lyrical passages. Zorn’s piece is followed by an arrangement for marimba and strings, by Takeshi Fuse, of Debussy’s Rêverie. This proves considerably more successful than the Bach adaptation, and not solely because it is much shorter. The gentle swells and warm lyricism of Debussy work with the inherent sound of the marimba in ways that Bach’s music does not: the marimba enhances the basic string lines and expands their expressiveness, resulting in a piece that occasionally sounds as if it is in an echo chamber but otherwise comes across with considerable sensitivity. And then comes Hazama’s concerto, featuring not only the marimba but also clarinet (Richard Stoltzman again), jazz bass (Eddie Gómez), and drums (Steve Gadd). The three-movement work quickly establishes itself as a blend of classical form with jazz sensibilities, with the marimba seeming quickly to come into its own in this context. The propulsive first movement gives way to a more-disconnected-sounding second one that opens with an extended marimba solo but becomes more interesting only when the clarinet and other instruments appear. Elements of the blues flicker in and out here, with the underlying pulse being that of nightclub material. And then the concluding third movement begins with brightness that is rather Gershwinesque, an initial pairing of marimba with brush-played drums giving way to perky material whose multiple rhythmic changes lend the movement some additional interest while confirming its jazz bona fides. Some marimba-and-clarinet material offers a change of pace and soundworld before things pick up again and the ensemble produces a pleasantly upbeat conclusion. The concerto as a whole is pleasant enough, if rather superficial, and will be enjoyable for listeners who are particularly enamored of the marimba and are interested in hearing some new material (or old, arranged material) for it. But although the (+++) disc is certainly engaging enough for marimba fans and fans of Mika Stoltzman, it is hard to imagine it having much attraction or staying power for a wider audience.