Vivaldi: Concerti per vari strumenti II. Les Musiciens du Prince – Monaco conducted by Gianluca Capuano. Naïve. $16.99.
Conradin Kreutzer: Septet; Friedrich Witt: Septet. Charis-Ensemble (Dietheim Adorf, clarinet; Stephan Rudiger, bassoon; David Bryant, horn; Rainer Sonne and Brigitte Rocholl-Gerlinghaus, violins; Christina Lohss, viola; Anette Adorf-Brenner, cello; Norbert Brenner, double bass). MDG Preziosa. $23.99.
David Balakrishnan: Island Prayers; Darkness Dreaming; Groove in the Louvre; Rhiannon Giddens: Pompey Ran Away; Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate: Little Loksi’; Terence Blanchard: Turtle Trajectory. Turtle Island Quartet (Gabe Terracciano and David Balakrishnan, violins; Benjamin von Gutzeit, viola; Naseem Alatrash, cello). Azica. $16.99.
The remarkable facility with which Vivaldi approached the creation of concertos for instruments of all kinds is very much on display on a grab-bag of a disc that is Volume 75 of the ongoing and outstanding Vivaldi Edition from Naïve, which is exploring works by Vivaldi found at the Biblioteca Nazionale in Turin. The performers this time, members of an ensemble called Les Musiciens du Prince – Monaco, are new to the series, and they and conductor Gianluca Capuano prove just as adept with Vivaldi’s music and with period performance practices as have all the other fine contributors to this long-running sequence of first-rate recordings. The six concertos on this CD – which is the second in the Vivaldi Edition with the all-encompassing label Concerti per vari strumenti – are quite varied indeed. RV 535 in D minor is for two oboes, which expertly weave lines around each other when not playing in unison; despite the key, the work, as usual in Vivaldi, is scarcely dark. RV 543 in F is for oboe and violin, and here Vivaldi contrasts the wind and string sounds to good effect while keeping the music moving in his usual upbeat manner. RV 553 in B-flat is for four violins, but sounds most of the time like a work for two pairs of the instruments – here Vivaldi elegantly balances the demands of a soloist-focused concerto with the style of a concerto grosso. RV 555 in C has the most-varied scoring of any work here, uniting and contrasting winds, bowed and struck strings, and harpsichords – it is scarcely conceived on a grand scale, being as short as Vivaldi concertos usually are, but its complex instrumentation gives it a high level of aural attractiveness as well as the generally celebratory manner associated with its home key. RV 557, also in C, is a kind of double-double concerto, featuring two violins and two oboes – but it is the violins that dominate the two fast movements, while the central Largo includes two recorders, basso continuo, and zero oboes: wind players in Vivaldi’s time played more than one instrument and likely switched from their outer-movement oboes to the recorders, giving the concerto an unusual overall instrumentation. Finally, RV 570 in F is known as La Tempesta di mare and is for transverse flute – rather oddly replaced by recorder in this performance – plus oboe and bassoon, and features an unexpected solo-violin part in the first movement. The bright and lively playing throughout the CD and the unfailing inventiveness of Vivaldi put on display in all these varied concertos make the disc, like so many others in the Vivaldi Edition, a real pleasure to hear. The music is not especially consequential – it is exploratory of sonorities and instrumental design, but always within a comparatively rigid formal structure. And yet it is always charming and elegant, and the little structural surprises with which the concertos are peppered keep them fascinating.
“Fascinating” is a bit of an overstatement where the septets of two little-known composers of Beethoven’s time are concerned – but it is certainly intriguing to hear what lesser lights of the late Classical and early Romantic era were producing purely to bring their audiences pleasure. Conradin Kreutzer (1780-1849) and Friedrich Witt (1770-1836) were accomplished composers, and if they made no attempts to produce heaven-storming works along the lines of Beethoven’s (Witt and Beethoven were born in the same year), they certainly did know how to meld a chamber ensemble skillfully and produce music that brings considerable listening pleasure in part because it does not attempt to be challenging. Kreutzer’s six-movement Septet in E-flat is for clarinet, bassoon, horn, violin, viola, cello, and double bass, and has some characteristics of an updated Baroque suite because of its unconnected movements and Kreutzer’s determination to provide material in a wide variety of tempos and forms – the latter including both a Menuett and a Scherzo. A recent MDG Preziosa recording of this seldom-heard work is not exactly “new,” being a performance by the Charis-Ensemble dating all the way back to 1986. The CD sounds remarkably good, however, and the players take the music quite seriously without ever being heavy-handed in their performance or trying to make the material communicate more meaningfulness than it can comfortably contain. The second movement, Adagio, is the longest and is a good example of what the work does and does not try to be: the slow pacing is more of the meandering variety than that of emotive depth. There is surface-level charm throughout Kreutzer’s Septet, and that is more than enough to make it enjoyable to hear even if the impression it leaves is one of evanescence. Witt’s Septet, although shorter, is more likely to stay with listeners – because of Witt’s considerable skill in writing for winds. Witt wrote a symphony once attributed to Beethoven, and two of his other symphonies were favorably reviewed by E.T.A. Hoffmann, but his music is almost never heard anymore – and on the basis of this Septet, that is something of a shame. The work is actually for eight instruments: clarinet, bassoon, horn, string quartet, and double bass – with the bass present to reinforce the cello line, much as in Beethoven’s Sextet, Op. 81b, which calls for seven instruments. Witt’s work is in F and in four movements, and the clarinet, bassoon and horn parts are out front and sufficiently distinctive throughout to give the work a warm and pleasant quality from start to finish. As in Kreutzer’s piece, Witt makes no attempt to produce anything profound, but there is certainly songfulness in the Adagio cantabile and considerable bounce and lyrical flow, nicely blended, in the other three movements. Listeners who enjoy music of this era – even (or perhaps especially) unchallenging works that must have been crowd-pleasers in their day – will find this CD very pleasurable indeed.
Contemporary chamber works sometimes strive for greater meaningfulness than they actually possess when they are heard. An Azica CD focused largely on compositions and performances by David Balakrishnan (born 1956) is one example. Balakrishnan and the other members of the Turtle Island Quartet try to mix and match musical approaches, forms and types on the disc, all for the purpose of producing a kind of portrait of the wide range of styles and concerns of American concert-hall (if not exactly classical) music. This is a lot of freight for these sincere but generally lightweight pieces to carry. Balakrishnan’s Island Prayers, for example, has three movements that are supposed to trace a common trajectory, from seriousness to joy. They do so to some extent, but not in any especially distinctive or distinguished way: the piece wears its emotional heart on its figurative sleeve and is interesting enough, but scarcely deeply expressive. Also here are Balakrishnan’s Darkness Dreaming, whose intense opening promises profundity that the rest of the piece never quite delivers, and Groove in the Louvre, whose amusing title is a high point in a work that possesses touches of humor and an improvisational feel – which make it actually quite listenable without making it seem to have anything particularly trenchant to communicate. The quartet members do throw themselves into all these works with enthusiasm, and the impressive performances are a major point of interest on this (+++) CD. Three non-Balakrishnan compositions expand the range of material heard here. Pompey Ran Away by Rhiannon Giddens (born 1977) is essentially a brief history of fiddle playing, using “fiddle technique” and a background awareness of Copland to produce a pleasant aura of sound. Little Loksi’ by Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate (born 1968) is based in Chickasaw stories and music but actually sounds mostly like an extension of Giddens’ tribute to old-fashioned fiddle playing – and unlike Giddens’ work, somewhat overstays its welcome. And Turtle Trajectory by Terence Blanchard (born 1962), intended as a tribute to this quartet, certainly gives the players something of a workout but does not have all that much to offer to a broader audience. All the music here is made attentively and with a good sense of string-quartet capabilities and aural possibilities in contemporary music. And every piece on the disc has elements that make it worth hearing once. But there is little staying power in these works, little in them that will likely lead listeners who are not also string players to be affected by the music in ways that make them want to hear the music repeatedly.