Dvořák and America.
PostClassical Ensemble conducted by Angel Gil-Ordóñez. Naxos. $9.99.
James Rhodes: Piano Man.
Signum Vision DVD. $17.99.
PROJECT Trio: Instrumental. Harmonyville
Records. $13.98.
Ruud van Eeten: Punctus Einz;
Jhero; Piano Quintet No. 1. Navona. $14.99.
Metropolis. Harrington/Loewen
Duo. Ravello. $14.99.
There are times when it is
nearly impossible to say that performers are “only” bringing music to
listeners. Indeed, it can be difficult at times to say just what sort of music
is being presented, and how the various elements of a concert, recital or CD
relate to each other. Music becomes part of a totality of experience in the
best combination presentations, in a way somewhat akin to opera (which combines
music with theater) but with much less stylization and often with greater focus
on the performers. Sometimes the performers may even come to matter as much as
the works they are offering. This is not the case in the fascinating
PostClassical Ensemble presentation called Dvořák
and America: the music itself is what counts here. But the selection of
music, and the use of music and words in the form known as melodrama (spoken
material delivered as music plays but not actually sung to the music, as
opposed to “melodrama” in the sense of exaggerated plot and characters),
creates a salutary and highly unusual listening experience. Dvořák’s best-known symphony remains his
last, No. 9, which many people persist in calling the “New World.” But that is
not what the composer himself called it – he said it was “From the New World.”
This is no mere semantic distinction: the work is as clearly Czech in its
structure and harmonies as earlier Dvořák
symphonies; it is only the themes that are taken from America. And it is this structural reality that Joseph
Horowitz and Michael Beckerman bring to the fore in their Hiawatha Melodrama (after Dvořák), arranged by Angel Gil-Ordóñez to be the primary element of a
new Naxos CD. Hiawatha Melodrama was
created only in 2013 and has not been recorded before, but many of its musical
elements will be quite familiar to listeners: they come from the Symphony No. 9
and the American Suite, as well as
the Violin Sonatina that also dates
to Dvořák’s American sojourn.
The words spoken in Hiawatha Melodrama
are taken from Longfellow’s very long and tedious poem, The Song of Hiawatha, whose never-ending trochaic tetrameter meter
becomes both artificial and dull quite quickly. The excerpts used in Hiawatha Melodrama, however, do not have
enough time to grate or become soporific, because they are relatively short,
are feelingly delivered by narrator Kevin Deas, and are accompanied by
well-chosen music that PostClassical Ensemble plays engagingly.
The point of creating Hiawatha Melodrama is that Dvořák said the poem had inspired him
when he was composing his Symphony No. 9 – in some specific ways and some
general ones. Listeners to this intriguing CD can judge for themselves the
extent to which Longfellow’s words had an impact on Dvořák. And to provide even more context, the disc also presents the
entire American Suite, excerpts from Eight Humoresques, and the Larghetto
from the Violin Sonatina – all on
their own. Nor is this everything offered. To show how Dvořák, influenced by America, himself
influenced its music, the CD includes the 1922 work Goin’ Home (in which bass-baritone Deas sings rather than narrates)
by William Arms Fisher (1861-1948). And there are also pieces here by Arthur
Farwell (1872-1952), whom Dvořák
influenced strongly and directly: Navajo
War Dance No. 2 (1904) and Pawnee
Horses in versions for piano (1905) and chorus (1937). This compendium of
music and words provides a genuinely interesting and difficult-to-describe
musical experience that provides considerable insight into the ways in which
America influenced Dvořák and
the way the great Czech composer returned the favor.
However, as already noted,
as intimately involved as the performers are in the Dvořák and America presentation, the recording is not about them
but about the music. Things are different in James Rhodes: Piano Man, a Signum Vision release in which music
that is far better known than Hiawatha
Melodrama is presented in an unusual context that requires listeners – and
viewers, this being a DVD – to pay as much attention to the performer as to the
works themselves. British pianist James Rhodes’ performances are always about
him as much as the music: he writes his own program notes and talks to the
audience about the works and the difficulties involved in bringing them to
life; and even when he does not specifically allude to his own troubled past,
the audience surely knows about it. Rhodes was abused as a child by a gym
teacher, developed significant mental-health issues, was hospitalized for eight
months, became a drug addict, and attempted suicide. It is worth remembering
that many, perhaps most, of the great composers of the past were afflicted with
significant issues of mental and physical health as well, Schumann’s madness
and Schubert’s syphilis being two well-known examples that are quite far from
unique. What Rhodes does is tap into his knowledge of the composers’ lives,
combine it with his own life experiences, and present the mixture to the
audience for its, if not delectation, at least comprehension. The old and unresolvable
argument about the extent to which composers’ lives are directly reflected in
their music and must be understood for the music to have its full impact is
relevant here. Certainly the great and very familiar works that Rhodes plays on
this DVD – by Bach, Beethoven, Chopin and Busoni – are enormously effective
even for listeners who know nothing about the circumstances of their
composition. But equally certainly, listening to Rhodes’ narrative and also
hearing the works provides the music with some unfamiliar trappings that shed
new light on the works – while also deflecting some light from them to Rhodes
himself. James Rhodes: Piano Man will
certainly not appeal to all listeners/viewers, but this (+++) recording offers
some fine performances and some contextual information that at least some music
lovers will find very involving indeed.
Involvement with the new CD
from PROJECT Trio also depends heavily on interest in the performers: Greg
Pattillo (flute), Eric Stephenson (cello) and Peter Seymour (bass).
Furthermore, it depends on listeners being interested in music that ranges from
classical to jazz to Brazilian, sometimes seeming to change genres or
arrangements within the same piece. The 11 tracks open and close with classical
works: Brahms’ Hungarian Dance No. 5
and the Bacchanale from Samson and
Delilah by Saint-Saëns (the
male protagonist misspelled as “Sampson” on the CD). The arrangements of these
works are moderately interesting and nicely played, but neither they nor the
group’s handling of the Brazilian song Andre
de Sapato Novo would be a major reason to own this CD. The eight other
tracks, all of them original compositions heavily flavored with jazz and
sometimes blending in pop, hip hop and other forms, and all played with
enthusiasm and a fine sound blend, provide the main rationale for this (+++)
disc. Djangish (which pays homage to
Belgian guitarist Django Reinhardt), 99
Mondays, 2against3, Sloeberry Jam (a nicely intertwining slow piece with
gospel elements), Shir, The Anthem, BRB
and Now all showcase the skills of
PROJECT Trio both in composition and in performance. The blending of the three
instruments is handled differently in some pieces than in others, giving the CD
from Harmonyville Records (the group’s own label) more variety than is inherent
in the works themselves. The music as a whole is rather unchallenging, but it
is well crafted and will please listeners who find PROJECT Trio an attractively
personable musical group.
The music itself is the
attraction on a new (+++) Navona CD featuring works by Dutch composer Ruud van
Eeten, but here too listeners receive a combination of material, because two of
the three works have specific sources that it helps to know in order to get
their full effect. Punctus Einz, a brief
work for saxophone quartet, is based on Bach’s Die Kunst der Fuge, the unusual use of four ranges of saxophone
giving the music surprising textures and sonorities. The piece is played by the
Amstel Quartet: Remco Jak on soprano saxophone, Olivier Sliepen on alto sax,
Bas Apswoude on tenor sax, and Ties Mellema on baritone sax. A different
grouping of four instruments – the more-usual string quartet – presents Jhero, whose inspiration is a well-known
painting by Hieronymus Bosch in which the artist portrays Heaven, the Garden of
Earthly Delights, and Hell. Here the Matangi Quartet (Maria-Paula Majoor and
Daniel Torrico Menacho, violins; Karsten Kleijer, viola; Arno van der Vuurst,
cello) offers careful playing of music whose representational aims are rather
straightforward: the first section of the music is slow and meditative, the
second sensual, the third heavily rhythmic and strongly accented. The Matangi
Quartet is joined by pianist Saskia Lankhoorn for the third work on the disc, Piano Quintet No. 1, which is less
mannered and more emotive than the other pieces here despite having no obvious
extramusical inspiration. Van Eeten’s music is carefully structured, but the
pieces here are more craftsmanlike than genuinely inspired.
Van Eeten’s use of
saxophones is quite different from that of the Harrington/Loewen Duo, whose
(+++) Ravello CD features five saxophone-and-piano works by five different
composers. Saxophonist Allen Harrington and pianist Laura Loewen offer
contemporary pieces that combine their instruments in a variety of ways and
that mingle traditional compositional techniques with ones that use colors and
images instead of standard notation to indicate the directions in which the
players should go. Diana McIntosh’s Dance
for Daedalus gives the performers many opportunities to interact as well as
put on individual displays. Gordon Fitzell’s Metropolis uses unconventional compositional techniques that are
likely more inspirational to performers than listeners – what is heard here is
nothing particularly unusual. Michael Matthews’ The Skin of Night is more interesting in its interplay between the
duo, while Robert Lemay’s Oran is
attractive in its textural elements and multiple mood changes. Srul Irving
Glick’s Sonata for Saxophone and Piano
“Adio” is the most straightforward work here in layout and is in some ways
the most effective piece, using its three-movement form to guide performers and
listeners alike through a multiplicity of emotions, techniques and forms of musical
interrelationship. None of the works here is truly outstanding as music, but in
combination with the attraction of hearing fine playing and an unusual
instrumental mixture, the CD provides a more-than-satisfying listening
experience.
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