Jan Van der Roost: Sirius;
Sinfonia per Orchestra; Manhattan Pictures. St. Petersburg State Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Vladimir Lande (Sirius;
Sinfonia); Philharmonic Orchestra of the Belgian Radio conducted by Fernand
Terby (Manhattan). Navona. $16.99.
NOVA: Society of Composers,
Inc.—Music by Phillip Schroeder, Vera Ivanova, Mark Engebretson, Chan Ji Kim,
Leonard Mark Lewis, Aleksander Sternfeld-Dunn, Piotr Szewczyk and Alan Chan.
Navona. $16.99.
There is a great deal of
contemporary classical music that is well-made and professionally structured,
and that sounds perfectly fine in performances by any number of orchestras,
chamber groups and soloists, but that remains more a specialty item than a
general-interest one for the simple reason that it is not strikingly original
and tends to sound like a great deal of other
well-crafted contemporary music. This is by no means a unique modern
phenomenon: the vast majority of composers in any age may be perfectly competent without offering the striking
insights and skilled communicativeness of each era’s giants. So just as
fanciers of 19th-century opera may enjoy the pre-Romantic works of
Franz Ignaz Danzi or the avowedly Romantic ones of Heinrich Marschner – without
regarding either composer as a towering figure – so listeners who enjoy
contemporary compositions in general may find themselves attracted to music by
some good but not highly distinguished composers. Jan Van der Roost (born
1956), for example, writes in a number of forms and seems comfortable with
several styles, without ever quite evolving a style of his own – at least on
the basis of the three works on a new Navona CD. Sirius (2003) is an attractive and largely upbeat concert overture
that shows some influence of Shostakovich and contrasts a pleasantly lyrical
central section with more-energetic, nicely scored ones. Sinfonia
per Orchestra (1989) is a four-movement work – some elements of the first
three movements recur in the fourth – and is written largely in traditional
forms: modified sonata in the first movement, a second movement marked
“Funebre” and containing a children’s song, a contrapuntal scherzo in the third
movement, and a finale that includes a canon and fugue before ending in the
same mysterious atmosphere with which the whole work began. This is an
effective piece that is worth hearing more than once, even though it is not
especially distinctive in style. Manhattan
Pictures was written for symphonic wind band and is also a four-movement
work. Like many other pieces about New York City, it is intended to showcase
the urban area’s energy, vitality and variety, and it does so well enough but
without bringing any particular new musical insights to the portrayal. Its most
interesting movement is its third, slow one, which is marked “Mesto” (“sad”)
and is very quiet throughout – with a focus on flute, clarinet and oboe. All these
Van der Roost pieces are pleasant and well-made enough to be worthwhile
experiences, but none has sufficient distinction to raise the composer to the
first rank among moderns.
As for Navona’s new CD
called NOVA: Society of Composers, Inc.,
it is simply an opportunity for listeners who generally like contemporary
classical compositions to sample a variety of short works by composers with
whom they may or may not be familiar. Nothing here is substantial enough to
make the disc worth buying for the sake of that one piece or that specific
composer. The whole CD runs just 53 minutes, with the longest work on it – if
you regard it as a single piece rather than three – being the 12-minute Three Etudes for Piano by Leonard Mark
Lewis. This work does indeed show off various pianistic techniques. Somewhat
similarly, Vera Ivanova’s Aftertouch
explores what the piano can do, although here the study is of different amounts
of pressure applied to the keys. Some of the other works have programmatic
elements: Piotr Szewczyk’s Apparitions
is supposed to suggest ghostly beings floating in a forest; Alan Chan’s Daughter’s Lullaby is a rather affecting
setting of Nicky’s Schildkraut’s story of a Korean child adopted by Western
parents; and Phillip Schroeder’s Metaphors
is a somewhat drier adaptation of the poetry of Marck L. Beggs. The remaining
works are Mark Engebretson’s well-put-together Two Duos, which explores old-fashioned and newfangled harmonic
approaches; Aleksander Sternfeld-Dunn’s Sonata for Alto Saxophone and Piano,
which also uses and contrasts traditional and modern musical language; and Chan
Ji Kim’s 9 Years, intended as a
homage to musical mentorship but not communicating that objective in any
particularly clear way. This CD is essentially a sampler of compositions and a
sampler of contemporary composers, reaching out in only a limited way: to
people so interested in modern classical chamber music that they would like to
hear various composers’ ways of handling it.
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