Moto Perpetuo: Works for Cello by
Andrew March, Greg Bartholomew, Alan Beeler, Bill Sherrill, Arthur Gottschalk,
and Nicholas Anthony Ascioti. Ovidiu Marinescu, cello. Navona. $16.99.
Anthony Piccolo: Imaginary Symphony
No. 1; Sonata for Cello Solo; Fever Time—Seven Songs on Words by Susan Kander;
Flûtes de suite for Multi-Flute Soloist; Fanfare-Sonatina for Four
Horns. Navona. $16.99.
Sophie Dunér
and the Callino Quartet: The City of My Soul. Big Round Records. $16.99.
Henry Wolking: Gone Playin’; The
Old Gypsy; James Scott Balentine: Dùn Èideann Blogh.
Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Petr Vronský. Navona. $14.99.
Bach: Mein Herze schwimmt im
Blut, BWV 199; Brandenburg Concerto No 4. Lorraine Hunt Lieberson,
mezzo-soprano; Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra conducted by Jeffrey Kahane.
Yarlung Records. $19.99.
The modern string instrument
with the widest range is the cello, and that is true as a range of
expressiveness, not just in terms of the notes it can produce. If there is one
work that showed beyond a doubt just how much the cello could do, it was Dvořák’s monumental concerto, whose
communicative powers remain unmatched more than a century later – but not for
lack of trying. Many composers today, including the six on the new Navona CD
called Moto Perpetuo, are fully aware
of the cello’s capabilities and are determined to plumb them. They do so with
varying success. Andrew March’s Three
Pieces for Solo Cello is primarily interested in the instrument’s dusky hue
and its capabilities of communicating thoughtfulness, especially in the last
and longest piece, “To Reflect in a Quiet Spot.” Greg Bartholomew’s brief Beneath the Apple Tree mixes Ovidiu
Marinescu’s cello with Kim Trolier’s flute in a pleasant combination of
contrasting sonorities. Alan Beeler contributes three works here and shows
himself as a miniaturist: Dance Suite for
Violin and Cello and One Good Turn
Deserves Another each contain four movements, with none of them lasting as
much as two minutes and both groupings being more lighthearted than cello music
often tends to be. Variations on Re-Do-Mi
is equally tied into traditional musical forms and, at three-and-a-half
minutes, comparatively substantial. Bill Sherrill’s Divertimento for Strings places the cello in the context of all
other modern orchestral string instruments, complementing it with violins
(Sylvia Ahramjian and Dana Weiderhold), viola (Scott Wagner) and double bass
(Charles J. Muench). Warmth within an overlay of gloom is communicated by
Arthur Gottschalk’s Sonata for Cello and
Piano: In Memoriam, a substantial work in which Marinescu and pianist Janet
Ahlquist explore the depths of their respective instruments. The two are joined
by violinist Ahramjian for the final work on the CD, Nicholas Anthony Ascioti’s Adirondack Meditation, which returns
the mood to that of the disc’s beginning and reestablishes the cello’s
meditative soulfulness as one of its most salient characteristics.
Anthony Piccolo writes for
solo cello, too, and his Sonata for Cello
Solo is also a showcase for emotion more than pure virtuosity as performed
by Petr Nouzovský. Indeed,
Piccolo clearly enjoys exploring the sonic delights offered by various
instruments’ timbres and capabilities. Flûtes
de suite (a pun on touts de suite,
“right now” or “immediately”) features Marta Talábová adapting to
four instruments in four movements: flute, alto flute, piccolo and bass flute.
The music is on the superficial side, but the contrasting sounds of the
instruments are fascinating. And then there is Fanfare-Sonatina for Four Horns, a short two-movement work (played
by Zuzana Rzounková, Martin
Paulik, Martin Sokol, and Jaroslav Hubek, conducted by Vít Mužík) that is
nicely constructed but breaks no new ground – as did, for example, Schumann’s Konzertstück for Four Horns and
Orchestra back in 1849. In fact, the
most interesting pieces on this CD are not the three that explore specific
instruments but the two that largely rely on the human voice – specifically the
voices of children – for their impact. Imaginary
Symphony No. 1, in which the Campanella Children’s Chorus and Moravian
Philharmonic Orchestra are conducted by Petr Vronský, is an appealingly straightforward work whose three movements
(“Lady-Bug’s Rain Song,” “Explore” and “Dream”) neatly encapsulate several
elements of a child’s world while being presented in effective orchestral garb.
And Fever Time—Seven Songs on Words by
Susan Kander combines Piccolo’s skill with voices with his interest in the
sound of specific instruments. It features the Hamelin Children’s Chorus
conducted by Piccolo himself, with Ladislav Bilan on percussion and Lucie Kaucká on celesta, and provides, in seven short
movements, an interesting musical perspective on words that Kander wrote about
a real-life fever.
The vocal communication is of a different
sort, and is decidedly adult, in a CD collaboration between Sophie Dunér and the Callino Quartet called The City of My Soul. Despite the
presence of a classical ensemble, this 19-track disc is by no means classical,
and does not really pretend to be. Dunér
is a jazz singer of the smoky-and-intense sort, writing her own music and
delivering it with feeling but without significant differentiation from song to
song. The Callino Quartet (Sarah Sexton and Fenella Humphreys, violins; Rebecca
Jones, viola; Sarah McMahon, cello) is a good ensemble with a strong commitment
to contemporary music, and is clearly comfortable with Dunér’s milieu – having often performed
in musical crossover mode before. There is no “title tune” here, although there
is a song called “The City of My Dreams,” and there is plenty of bittersweet
thinking and emoting in songs such as “Marionettes,” “The Singer from Hell,”
“Dizcharmed,” “Captain Crunch” and “You.”
The word “fusion” is much heard in classical-music circles these days,
and it is a good noun to describe many composers’ attempts to incorporate
elements of jazz, rock, pop, Eastern music and other nontraditional classical
elements into their work. The City of My
Soul, though, feels less like a case of fusion than like one of
old-fashioned jazz (with modern-style and occasionally quirky lyrics)
accompanied very nicely by classical musicians whose fine playing does not,
however, provide any substantial connection to a world beyond Dunér’s own. It would have been
interesting and clever – just to choose one possibility – if Dunér and the quartet had together
performed the old Irish air, “Cailin cois tSuir a me” (“The Girl by the River
Suir”), from which the quartet takes its name. But the CD is really about Dunér, and the Callino Quartet stays
mostly in the background.
There is a Scottish
connection, not an Irish one, in the new Navona CD of music by Henry Wolking
and James Scott Balentine: the latter’s Dùn
Èideann Blogh is a kind of musical portrait of Edinburgh, the
title being the city’s Gaelic name. Featuring Robert Walzel on clarinet, Eric
Stomberg on bassoon and the Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra under Petr Vronský, this three-movement suite is
nicely scored but does not seem especially evocative of the locale to which it
pays tribute, although its primary intent of recalling family and friends from
times past is reasonably well communicated. The two works by Wolking – both are
also suites – are somewhat more effective. Gone
Playin’ is an interesting attempt to make music from epitaphs, a purely
instrumental work intended to showcase three forms of connection between life
and death: “Gone Fishin’,” “Gone Sleepin’” and “Gone Dancin’.” The movements,
which feature Walzel with the Moravian Philharmonic Strings under Vronský, are nicely contrasted, and the
second, which is labeled a “jazz lullaby,” is particularly interesting. Wolking’s
The Old Gypsy draws on a
more-traditional source, the music of Hungary, presenting this influence not
orchestrally but through a string quartet (Vit Mužík and Igor Kopyt, violins; Dominika Mužíková, viola;
Marian Pavlik, cello). A waltz movement and a finale whose title is the same as
that of the entire piece show their provenance particularly clearly, but all
four movements manage to bespeak elements of Hungary without ever falling
directly into simplistic folksong quotation or otherwise being overly obvious.
This CD has a number of appealing elements, but it is short – less than 50
minutes – and will therefore likely be of interest primarily to listeners
already familiar with and enamored of Wolking’s and Balentine’s works.
Listeners’ main interest in
a new Bach vocal-and-instrumental CD featuring Lorraine Hunt Lieberson is
almost sure to be in the singer, whose September 2003 performance of the
cantata Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut
here becomes an in memoriam
presentation: Lieberson died of breast cancer in 2006. This live recording of
the cantata, which also features Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra principal oboist
Allan Vogel and principal violist Roland Kato, is on another very short CD,
lasting not much more than 40 minutes, but listeners enamored of Lieberson’s mellow
and expressive mezzo-soprano voice will surely want to have it. The cantata,
written for the 11th Sunday after Trinity, is a particularly
anguished one: “My heart swims in blood, since the offspring of my sins in
God’s holy eyes make me a monster. …For me my sins can be nothing but the
hangmen of Hell.” From this opening, the
cantata moves steadily toward redemption and light, and the final aria, “How
joyful is my heart, for God is appeased,” truly sounds like a triumph after
severe internal struggles. Lieberson’s knowing, well-paced and emotionally
telling handling of this mostly dark cantata is revelatory, and even listeners
not familiar with Lieberson’s life and her death at age 52 will surely relate
to the struggle and eventual triumph that Bach portrayed so movingly in 1714.
The cantata is coupled with a nicely handled performance of Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in a live
recording from 2011. The contrast between the mood of the instrumental work and
that of the vocal one is obvious. The two do not go especially well together,
but both pieces are very well performed, and listeners seeking some respite
from the cantata can easily turn to the concerto – although they will have to
program their players to do so, since the Brandenburg appears first on the CD.
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