John Adams: Harmonielehre; Doctor
Atomic Symphony; Short Ride in a Fast Machine. Royal Scottish National
Orchestra conducted by Peter Oundjian. Chandos. $19.99 (SACD).
Philip Glass: Concerto Fantasy for
Two Timpanists and Orchestra (transcribed by Mark Lortz); Mohammed Fairouz:
Symphony No. 4, “In the Shadow of No Towers.” Ji Hye Jung and Gwendolyn
Burgett, timpani; Jänis Porietis,
trumpet; University of Kansas Wind Ensemble conducted by Paul W. Popiel. Naxos.
$9.99.
Cindy McTee: Symphony No.
1—Ballet for Orchestra; Circuits; Einstein’s Dream; Double Play. Detroit
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Leonard Slatkin. Naxos. $9.99.
Roberto Sierra: Sinfonía
No. 4; Fandangos; Carnaval. Nashville Symphony conducted by Giancarlo
Guerrero. Naxos. $9.99.
All composers build on those
who have gone before, sometimes acknowledging the debt overtly and sometimes
not. The distinct elements of the style of John Adams (born 1947) should not
obscure the building blocks of which many of his works consist – certainly not
in the case of Harmonielehre (1984-85).
The title itself, meaning “study of harmony,” is a throwback to Schoenberg’s
1911 music-theory text as well as several others. And Adams has freely
acknowledged the debt to Schoenberg here. Adams’ Harmonielehre is less important for its antecedents, though, than
for the way it helped the composer break through an 18-month arid period. Adams
says a dream inspired the work, but that information is scarcely necessary to
appreciate the music. Nor is understanding of Adams’ minimalist leanings
particularly important, since minimalism is only one of his techniques here,
along with repetitive rhythms, bits of melody, and a final strong and rather
unexpected assertion of tonality (E-flat major). Harmonielehre contains elements derived directly from Schoenberg,
and also ones that come straight from Mahler (the Tenth Symphony) and in sound
from Sibelius. Although not to all tastes – Adams’ music never is – Harmonielehre is attractive for the way
it melds its various influences into a recognizable style of Adams’ own, all
while encompassing a variety of emotionally resonant approaches (such as the
inability of the second movement to find resolution). Peter Oundjian and the
Royal Scottish National Orchestra give Harmonielehre
a strong, well-balanced and thoroughly effective performance. And they do a
fine job as well with the Dr. Atomic
Symphony (2007), derived by Adams from his opera and showcasing the stage
work’s overture, interludes and some of its arias. Here the influence of prior
composers is less strongly evident than in Harmonielehre,
although the opera’s libretto (by Peter Sellars) is pervaded by John Donne, the
Bhagavad Gita and other works. Like other symphonies inspired by stage works,
such as the two versions of Prokofiev’s Fourth, the Dr. Atomic Symphony is more effective for listeners familiar with
the source of its music, but it does stand well enough on its own. Also on this
very well-recorded Chandos SACD is one of Adams’ most overtly appealing works, Short Ride in a Fast Machine (1986),
which succeeds in part because it is
short and its repetitiveness therefore has no chance to become wearisome.
Oundjian brings to it the same enthusiasm and style that he provides to the
other, longer pieces here.
The world première Naxos recording of Mark Lortz’
transcription of the Concerto Fantasy for
Two Timpanists and Orchestra by Philip Glass (born 1937) shows this work to
lie firmly within Glass’ minimalist and post-minimalist stylistic leanings as
well as, very broadly, within the concerto tradition as a whole. The large
percussion section is played against as well as with the timpani solos, and the
work’s very strong rhythmic emphases are crucial building blocks for music that
ebbs and flows quite effectively. The work dates to 2000-01 and was transcribed
by Lortz in 2004. Its martial elements and strong insistence on percussive
themes fit well into this wind-band version, which is handled quite well by the
University of Kansas Wind Ensemble under Paul W. Popiel. The players also do a
fine job with Symphony No. 4, “In the
Shadow of No Towers” by Mohammed Fairouz (born 1985). This work, Fairouz’s
first major composition for wind instruments, was finished as recently as 2012
and is, as the title makes clear, one of the many homages paid by composers to
the terrorist murders at the World Trade Center in 2001. But that event is only
one inspiration, and actually an indirect one: the symphony is primarily
influenced by Art Spiegelman’s 2001 comic book about the mass murders. The
comic, perhaps unsurprisingly, has led Fairouz to produce a somewhat
surface-level, heart-on-its-sleeve work, its four movements titled in ways that
quite directly convey what the composer intends with the music: “The New
Normal,” “Notes of a Heartbroken Narcissist,” “One Nation under Two Flags,” and
“Anniversaries.” There are moving elements in the symphony as well as some
highly superficial ones; Spiegelman himself has described Fairouz’ work as
“high-brow cartoon music,” and while that is intended as a compliment, it may
not seem so to all listeners who hear this rather brash and frequently obvious work.
Nevertheless, both the Glass and Fairouz pieces merit considerable attention
for the way they integrate elements of the past with ones of the present to
produce impacts that, if not always innovative, are nevertheless moving and well
conveyed.
The music of Cindy McTee
(born 1953) is less distinctive than that of Adams or Glass, for all that it is
well made, equally adept at integrating a variety of influences, and very well
played by the Detroit Symphony under Leonard Slatkin. The most salient
characteristic of McTee’s First Symphony is color: the composer has a fine
sense of orchestration and employs it fully here, producing a sonic environment
that is always attractive and constantly changing. The symphony, written in
2002 and entitled “Ballet for Orchestra” by the composer, is somewhat less
impressive as a whole than in parts of its four movements, which are called “On
with the Dance,” “Till a Silence Fell,” “Light Fantastic” and “Where Time Plays
the Fiddle.” McTee is more impressive and emotionally engaging in the shorter
pieces on this new Naxos CD. Circuits
(1990), a fine curtain raiser, is jazzy, bright and upbeat throughout, and the
two movements of Double Play (2010) offer
a series of influences from the past that zoom by and are presented within
McTee’s own style. Indeed, the titles of the movements recall matters from the
past in a very clever way: “Unquestioned Answer” (think of Ives’ Unanswered Question) and “Tempus Fugit”
(in which time certainly does seem to fly). As for Einstein’s Dream (2004), its influences are as disparate as quantum
physics and electronic music, with McTee using computer-generated sounds to
portray and comment upon Einstein’s findings in theoretical physics. McTee is
if anything a touch too clever for her own good, or her audience’s good: her
works gain a lot with an understanding of what they are supposed to be about
and how they are made, but they are not always wholly convincing in and of
themselves. Still, this (+++) CD has a great deal to recommend it.
So does another (+++) Naxos
disc featuring music of another composer born in 1953, Roberto Sierra. Only one
work on this CD, Fandangos (2000),
has been recorded before. It is a well-constructed orchestral fantasy using a
very specific influence as its core: a harpsichord piece attributed to Padre
Antonio Soler (1729-1783). Sierra, who is Puerto Rican, is influenced by
Spanish music in general as well as, in this case, Soler’s in particular, and
in Fandangos he shows himself able to
start with 18th-century material and produce a carefully constructed,
freewheeling fantasy that sustains nicely. The Spanish influence is also
evident in Sierra’s Sinfonía
No. 4, which is in the traditional four movements (but with Spanish tempo
indications rather than ones in Italian or German) and uses more-or-less-traditional
symphonic structure. The harmonies and rhythms of this work are contemporary –
it dates to 2008-09 – but its form shows the clear influence of the past. In
truth, though, the music does not have a great deal to say; the structure and
assembly are impressive enough, but the work does not really stay with a
listener after it ends. Carnaval
(2007) is less ambitious but on the whole more successful. Here the influence adapted,
quite clearly in the title and also to an extent in the five movements, is that
of Schumann; but Sierra makes his miniatures into evocations of the mythical
rather than of the everyday and celebratory. The five movements are
“Gargoyles,” “Sphinxes,” “Unicorns,” “Dragons” and “The Phoenix,” and Sierra’s tone-painting
showcases both the wonder of the imaginary creatures and their occasional air
of menace. Giancarlo Guerrero and the Nashville Symphony handle Sierra’s music
skillfully and with grace, and the CD as a whole offers a fine opportunity to
become acquainted with yet another contemporary composer who has found ways to
reach into the past for inspiration that he can then transform into his own
expressions.
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