Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring
(arr. Shumway); Holst: The Planets (excerpts) (arr. Anderson);
Anderson/Saint-Saëns: Danse Macabre. The 5 Browns.
Steinway & Sons. $17.99.
Gheorghe Costinescu: Theme and
Variations; Sonata for the Piano; Evolving Cycle of Two-Part Modal Inventions
for Piano; Essay in Sound. Stephen Gosling, piano. Ravello. $14.99.
Stephen Scott and the Bowed Piano
Ensemble: Ice & Fire. Navona. $16.99.
Kirk O’Riordan: Chamber Music.
Ravello. $14.99.
Roger Bourland: Four Quartets of
Songs & Arias. Juliana Gondek, soprano; William Lumpkin, piano. Navona.
$16.99.
As Long as There Are Songs.
Stephanie Blythe, mezzo-soprano; Craig Terry, piano. Innova. $14.99.
“Oh, the thinks you can
think,” wrote Dr. Seuss. Had the good doctor been near a piano at the time, he
might have added, “And the things you can do once you think of them!” The piano
is so versatile – even to the point of being two forms of instrument at the same time, percussion and strings – that
its possibilities in traditional and non-traditional use are nearly endless. Take
the fascinating CD by the 5 Browns (Deondra, Desirae, Greg, Melody and Ryan),
for example. There is no reason whatsoever to arrange Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring for five, count them,
five pianos – except that the arrangement makes possible huge gouts of sound
and all sorts of intriguing effects among the instruments, creating a genuine
sonic spectacular that is absolutely not
Stravinsky but at the same time absolutely is.
Stravinsky was a highly innovative thinker – The Rite of Spring itself is evidence of that – and might well have
been intrigued by this decidedly odd but truly fascinating approach to his
ballet. Who knows? What listeners will
know is that the arrangement by Jeffrey Shumway is highly intriguing and is
exceptionally well-played – providing a variety of new sonic insights into the
music, whether or not they are ones that Stravinsky intended. A curiosity, yes,
but a truly fascinating one. The three movements from Holst’s The Planets (Mars, Neptune and Jupiter)
are somewhat less successful: the pounding rhythms of Mars are marvelous and
the jocularity of Jupiter only a bit less so, but the mysticism of Neptune
falls short of evanescence in this arrangement. This movement is clearly placed
between the other two as a sort-of intermezzo in a sort-of suite from what is
already a suite; but in that position, it loses its intended climactic role and
merely sounds pale. Not so the Danse
Macabre, though, aptly described as a “Bacchanal for Five Pianos,” which
bounds and bounces all over the place and frequently sounds genuinely devilish
as well as truly danceable. Both the Holst and the Saint-Saëns are very ably arranged by Greg
Anderson of the piano duet Anderson & Roe. All in all, this is a
fascinating disc from Steinway & Sons, showcasing the firm’s pianos in
unexpected and thoroughly interesting ways.
Far more straightforward but
in its own way equally successful, the new Gheorghe Costinescu piano CD on Ravello
takes the piano through paces that range from those of the Baroque to those
that are explicitly of the 21st century. Many contemporary composers
continue to look back hundreds of years for inspiration, but few have rung
changes on the old forms as successfully as Costinescu does here. Theme and Variations (1956) is simply a
set of 14 variations and coda on a chorale-like theme stated forthrightly at
the beginning – and if the harmonies are
modern, the overall sensibility is of the Classical era. To some extent, the
same may be said of Sonata for the Piano
(1957; revised 2007-08), which is in traditional three-movement form and of modest
15-minute length, but which is too broad and large-boned to be deemed a
sonatina: both the scale of the themes and the handling of their development
show this work to be an effective Classical-style sonata, although, again, the
treatment of the material is quite clearly of the 20th and 21st
centuries (the work includes pronounced jazz and ragtime elements). Costinescu
reaches farthest back in time for Evolving
Cycle of Two-Part Modal Inventions for Piano (1964), which includes a one-part
invention and six two-parters – very much in the mode of Bach, although
scarcely in his harmonic style. Stephen Gosling plays all these works with
strong involvement and a fine sense of their structure and the older structures
on which they are built. Gosling also does a bang-up job –the adjective seems
particularly appropriate – with Essay in
Sound (2011), which is the most modern-sounding of all the works here. This
is not necessarily a compliment: it is
sound that predominates in this piece, not music in the sense in which music
dominates the other three works. Listeners who become intrigued by Costinescu’s
skillful adaptations of old forms to the modern era may be somewhat taken aback
by his thoroughgoing modernism here – although it cannot be denied that this “essay”
showcases one element of the piano quite clearly: its ability to make a great
deal of percussive sound.
It is the “strings” element
of the piano that comes through in Navona’s (+++) CD of music by Stephen Scott,
which showcases a Colorado College group called the Bowed Piano Ensemble that
Scott founded. This is entirely experimental music, with all the pluses and
minuses the term implies. The 10 ensemble members perform by opening a grand
piano and bowing, plucking, striking and otherwise manipulating its strings to
produce sounds ranging from almost painfully extended lines to staccato
exclamations and deep, resonant bell-like tolls. There is nothing particularly
new about the notion of playing the inside of a piano, although it is certainly
clear why this is not a release on
the Steinway & Sons label: the piano was never intended by its makers to be
used this way. Nevertheless, John Cage’s “prepared piano” and other
non-traditional approaches to the instrument laid the groundwork for Scott’s
approach many decades ago. Scott’s music is inescapably of the moment, and it
is hard to imagine it having much staying power, especially because he
sometimes ties it directly to events of the day: Afternoon of a Fire (2012), for bowed piano and improvised Native
American flute, is so titled because of a particular wildfire in Scott’s native
Colorado. Also here are New York Drones
(2006), whose title hints at its sonic landscape; Vocalise on “In a Silent Way” (2001) and “La Guitarra” (2002), both of which feature soprano Victoria
Hansen; Aurora Ficta (2008), the most
elaborate piece on the CD; and Baltic
Sketches (1997), a set of five pieces that do have somewhat different
characters but are in no way particularly “Baltic.” This is a disc for devotees
of contemporary music and unusual sonorities more than for people interested in
what a piano can do (or be made to do).
One traditional use of the
piano, and one still used by modern composers, is within chamber groups – and
Kirk O’Riordan uses it that way as well as in a solo capacity on a (+++)
Ravello CD featuring six of his works. Water
Lilies (2000) and Lacrimosa (2011)
are solo-piano works, both played affectingly by Holly Roadfeldt, but neither
of them – despite their titles – is especially evocative of its designated
subject. Sonata rapsodica (2009) for
clarinet and piano, in which Roadfeldt is joined by Marianne Gythfeldt, is more
interesting, its two movements both flowing freely and with frequent changes of
emotional expression. Pressing Forward,
Pushing Back (2005) is equally long, but in a single discursive movement.
It is written for flute and piano – Ruben Councill is the flautist – and has
some effective moments, although the piece as a whole never quite gels. The
same may be said of Dying Light
(2004), which again is about the same length but is scored for violoncello (designated
that way, not as “cello”) and piano and which features cellist Lawrence
Stomberg. Interestingly, it is a piece in which O’Riordan uses flute and violoncello with piano that comes
across particularly well: A Strange
Flower for Birds and Butterflies (2012), despite its overdone title and a
sense that it is often trying too hard to be expressive, is a well-wrought work
with many intriguing passages.
Another traditional use of
piano is as accompaniment for vocal cycles or individual songs. Two new (+++)
releases show the piano in this role. The Roger Bourland CD on Navona showcases
four quartets called Four Apart Songs,
Four End Songs, Four Marian Songs and Four
Xmas Songs. Bourland nicely handles traditional art-song territory, most
feelingly in the Marian songs and most amusingly in the final Xmas song, “The
Crocodile’s Xmas Ball.” The works are effective enough, if stylistically
unexceptional, and are very well performed by Juliana Gondek and William
Lumpkin. The performances by Stephanie Blythe and Craig Terry on an Innova disc
are fine, too, although the territory here is popular music rather than
anything approaching the classical. The 14 songs here include ones by Sammy
Cahn, Irving Berlin, Ira Gershwin, Johnny Mercer and others, dating as far back
as 1919 (“Look for the Silver Lining” by Buddy DeSylva and Jerome Kern) and
being as recent as 1965 (Gordon Jenkins’ “This Is All I Ask”). Blythe has a
rich, resonant mezzo-soprano voice, and she handles these vocal standards well
and feelingly on a disc that is particularly well-recorded but not, in the end,
especially revelatory of much in the music that has not been revealed before.
The piano’s role here and on the Bourland CD is clearly a subsidiary one, and
that in itself is of some interest, since here is an instrument that can resound
throughout the concert hall but can equally well take a back seat to a singer
in a far quieter and more intimate setting. One thing you can certainly think
of when it comes to the piano is versatility.
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