Lars-Erik Larsson: Orchestral
Works, Volume 1—Symphony No. 1; Four Vignettes to Shakespeare’s “The Winter’s
Tale”; Music for Orchestra; Pastoral for small orchestra; Lyric Fantasy for
small orchestra. Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra conducted by Andrew Manze.
CPO. $16.99.
Matthew Malsky: Chamber Works.
Ravello. $14.99.
Sydney Hodkinson: A Keyboard
Odyssey—Music for Piano and Organ. Barry Snyder, piano; Boyd Jones, organ.
Navona. $16.99.
Ute Lemper: Forever—The Love
Songs of Pablo Neruda. Steinway & Sons. $17.99.
Stravinsky in Hollywood: A Film
by Marco Capalbo. C Major DVD. $24.99.
A Tribute to Krzysztof
Penderecki: Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima; Duo Concertante for violin
and double bass; Concerto Grosso for three cellos and orchestra; Credo. Soloists,
choruses and Sinfonia Varsovia conducted by Charles Dutoit, Valery Gergiev and
Krzysztof Urbański. Accentus Music DVD. $24.99.
Music is not entirely independent of
place, any more than it is independent of the era in which it is written. This
is a given for some composers and a matter for others to explore: think of
Mendelssohn’s “Italian” symphony and Tchaikovsky’s Capriccio Italien as two clear examples. Other geographical areas
are less well-represented than Italy. Sweden, for example, has a rich musical
heritage dating back at least to Franz Berwald (1796-1868), but its composers
are frequently unknown outside Scandinavia. Lars-Erik Larsson (1908-1986) is
one who deserves wider recognition. From early works that lie within the
Romantic tradition but contain his personal stamp, to late ones that adapt 20th-century
compositional techniques to Larsson’s unique viewpoint, Larsson’s music is
unfailingly well-crafted and repays both initial hearings and repeated ones.
The first volume of CPO’s planned survey of Larsson’s orchestral music is a
fine place for those unfamiliar with this composer to make his acquaintance.
His First Symphony is a youthful work, dating to 1927-28, and is obviously influenced
by Sibelius and Nielsen; but for all that, it already shows a composer with a
firm grasp of large forces and a willingness to tackle complex musical forms.
And it simply sounds good. The Four
Vignettes to Shakespeare’s “The Winter’s Tale” (1937-38) and Pastoral for small orchestra (1937) are
far more delicate, even lilting at times, with these theater scores combining
immediate accessibility with thoughtfulness about the subject matter being
offered on stage. Music for Orchestra
(1949) is a knottier work and far more modern in sound, with dissonance
throughout and austerity that contrasts strongly with the lushness of the early
First Symphony. And the Lyric Fantasy for
small orchestra (1967), a work with a distinct 20th-century sound,
is complex in construction but not so when heard: it communicates effectively
with the listener in a way that many pieces of its time do not. Andrew Manze
has clearly studied Larsson’s music carefully, conducting all of it with care
and involvement, and the Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra seems to have no
difficulties at all with its complexities, all of which are at the service of a
more direct reaching-out to the audience than is evinced in music by many of
Larsson’s contemporaries.
Matthew Malsky takes the
geographical approach of Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky and so many others directly
to heart on a (+++) Ravello CD whose title, Geographies
& Geometries, neatly encapsulates its intentions. The works here are
intended to evoke emotions musically, based on those felt by people – or, more
accurately, by Malsky – at certain locations or in certain circumstances. Escaping the Delta (2005), for example,
is inspired by the blues, specifically as exemplified by the music of Robert
Johnson; but it combines a Johnsonian sensibility with elements of traditional
chamber music. The work is a duet for flute and cello, performed here by the
duo C-Squared (Lisa Cella, flute; Franklin Cox, cello). Another riparian work, Same River Twice (2008/2013) for wind
quintet, is designed to use a geographical feature as a metaphor for having a
familiar experience and finding something new in it. Members of the Radius
Ensemble – Sarah Brady, flute and piccolo; Jennifer Montbach, oboe; Michael
Norsworthy, clarinets; Sally Merriman, bassoon; and Anne Howarth, horn – offer
a well-blended sound here. A third geographically inspired work is tied by its
title quite directly to Malsky’s intentions in writing it: Archipelago of Regrets (2012) is a theme and variations intended to
illustrate, bit by bit, the experience of disenchantment and the way through it
to an eventual acceptance that puts one in mind of the conclusion of
Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner:
“A sadder and a wiser man/ He rose the morrow morn.” The other two works on the
CD fall under the “geometries” rather than “geographies” label. The rather
ridiculously titled -42.489°
108.756° (elegy) (2011), for two violas, is palindromic; that fact
and the work’s overdone name are about all that need be said about it – except
that violists Mark Berger and Peter Sulski approach it gamely. Finally, there
is Subtending the Right Angle
(1999/2013), again featuring Radius Ensemble members Brady, Montbach and
Norsworthy, plus Kent O’Doherty on bassoon; Benjamin Wright on trumpet; John
Faieta on trombone; Linda Osborn-Blashke on piano; and Susan Hagen on bass,
with the ensemble conducted by Jeffrey Means. Once again here, there is a
somewhat abstruse and overthought attempt to integrate musical sensibilities
with those from other fields. The ultimate question for music, though, is
whether it works as music, for people
who do not know (and perhaps do not care) about the composer’s thought
processes or compositional techniques. It is in this area of connection with
the audience that Malsky’s works fall short, for all that they are clearly
thought through with considerable attentiveness.
The journey enshrined on a
(+++) CD called A Keyboard Odyssey is
one that explores two forms of keyboard instrument: piano and organ (the latter
being more of a wind instrument in terms of how its sound is produced:
analogously, one would scarcely call an accordion a keyboard instrument just
because a keyboard is used to alter the sound of the wind that produces the
notes). Everything on this Navona CD is short: there are seven works in all,
but the longer ones are essentially suites of brief, disconnected pieces, being
in their totality heirs to the suite of Bach’s and Telemann’s day. Curiously,
five of the seven Sydney Hodkinson pieces here are excerpts, the only two
complete works being the pleasantly bouncy Mini-Rag
for Right Hand Alone (1990) and Organmusic:
Six Tableaux for Solo Organ (2009), which mixes old forms with modern
sensibilities. The disc’s other contents are Nos. 1, 4 and 5 from Episodes: Five Thoughts for Solo Piano
(2007); No. 3 from Dance Overtures
(1981); Nos. 1, 2 and 5 from Faded
Anecdotes: Five Images for Solo Piano (2009); Nos. 3 and 2, in that order,
from Stolen Goods: Four Preludes for Solo
Piano (2008); and Nos. 1 and 2 from Snapshots:
Three Miniatures for Solo Piano (2007). The short-form works are often
effective in their small ways, with the Snapshots
vignettes (“A Strange Dream” and “A Faded Dance”) being particularly affecting,
and several of the fast-paced items tumbling neatly over themselves and over
the piano keys. Barry Snyder and Boyd Jones do a good job throughout, although
the reasons for including only bits and pieces of Hodkinson’s various suites
are rather obscure.
The journey in Ute Lemper: Forever is one of both
geography and time. English, French and Spanish songs appear here, all written
by Lemper as well as performed by her; string arrangements are by Juan Antonio
Sanchez. This is a Lemper production through and through: concept and
direction, as well as melodies and vocals, are by her, with some assistance
from composer and bandoneon player Marcelo Nisinman. The actual words, as the
disc’s full title indicates, are by Pablo Neruda, but – and this is the
traveling-in-time element – the settings place the songs directly in the
cabaret tradition. It is quite easy to imagine Lemper singing them in a smoky
British pub or its equivalent in France or Spain in the years of the Weimar
Republic; indeed, Neruda’s Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair dates
to the Weimar years (1924). Lemper’s rich, throaty voice, mingled with strings,
bandoneon, and the sound of the lutelike charango (played by Freddy Torrealba),
takes listeners through a multilingual song cycle that tends to dwell a bit too
much on the obviously emotive as it meanders from La nuit dans l’ile (a first night together) to The Saddest Poem / Nr. 20 (a predictable finale of heartbreak and
despair). Lemper’s voice has enough variety to encompass the various emotions
of the 12 poem settings, but not enough to carry listeners along effectively
through more than an hour of music that not only features sameness of topic but
also is all set by Lemper herself in ways that quickly become familiar. It is
difficult not to be swept into the emotional intensity that opens this (+++) CD
on the Steinway & Sons label, but equally difficult to remain at that level
of involvement throughout the recording. In a live concert, Lemper’s stage
presence and the setting itself would contribute to and presumably enhance the
mood of the performance. In recorded form, however, what works well for five
minutes, or 15, or even 25, becomes a bit much at a length of nearly 65.
The travels chronicled in
Marco Capalbo’s film, Stravinsky in
Hollywood, are both geographical and emotional. Stravinsky was not just an
old-world European trying to accommodate himself and his ambitions to the new
world of Hollywood. He was also, by the time he moved to California in 1939,
world-famous for his groundbreaking music of the years before World War I and
for his neoclassicism of the 1920s. He left Europe as World War II was breaking
out and ended up living in Los Angeles longer than in any other city – but his
relationship with his adopted country (he became a U.S. citizen in 1945) was
complex and not always a happy one. This is what Capalbo explores in his film,
a niche production that lasts just 53 minutes and appears on a C Major DVD
without bonus material. The entire (+++) DVD may be regarded as a bonus by
Stravinsky fans, however, and will be of special interest because it is one of
the few Stravinsky-related offerings in recent decades that does not come from the ever-present Robert
Craft, longtime molder and keeper of the Stravinsky legacy. This is not to say that
Stravinsky in Hollywood contains
anything to which Craft or other legend managers would be likely to object. It
is, in fact, somewhat on the bland side. There is the usual archival footage,
including some not previously seen, and there are the to-be-expected interviews
with Stravinsky himself, and there are scenes from some of the films whose
music he created: several 20th-century Russian composers, including
Shostakovich, Prokofiev and Polish-born Mieczyslaw Weinberg as well as Stravinsky, had
quite an affinity for film scores. There is nothing revelatory in Capalbo’s
film, which is a once-over-lightly covering more than three decades of
Stravinsky’s life in less than an hour. The pacing is good, and fans of
Stravinsky will enjoy seeing him in a Hollywood context (he has a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame). Those seeking insight into the composer and his
reasons – other than the obvious financial one – for spending so much of his
life in the Hollywood milieu will be disappointed, but those who deem Stravinsky
a celebrity and are interested in him in the context of the celebrity culture
of his time will enjoy Capalbo’s offering.
If Stravinsky was often
considered a citizen of the world, Krzysztof Penderecki is intimately
associated with his native Poland. A new Accentus Music DVD chronicles the
November 23, 2013 concert at the Polish National Opera in Warsaw, at which
numerous artists paid tribute to Penderecki on his 80th birthday.
Conductors Charles Dutoit, Valery Gergiev and Krzysztof Urbański were featured, along with Anne-Sophie Mutter and Roman Patkoló in the Duo Concertante for violin and double bass;
Daniel Müller-Schott, Arto
Noras and Ivan Monighetti in the Concerto
Grosso for three cellos and orchestra; plus vocal soloists, along with the
Chorus of the Polish National Opera, Warsaw Philharmonic Choir and Warsaw Boys
Choir, and Sinfonia Varsovia. The DVD includes the entire concert plus a 15-minute
discussion of it by Penderecki himself as a bonus. Invariably, events like this
are respectful to the point of being hagiographic, and that is certainly the
case here. The four works are all performed with devoted attention and
consummate skill, with the 1960 Threnody
especially impressive half a century later and still sounding ultra-modern
through its use of unusual textures, peculiar bowing techniques and
considerable use of tone clusters. The DVD is, as usual in a visual version of
a concert, intended primarily for people who want to feel as if they were present
during the performance – and who do not mind having their visuals guided by the
choices of the director. There is nothing especially dramatic or unexpected in
those choices, but also nothing that adds significantly to the experience of
the music in this (+++) release. Devotees of Penderecki’s music, who want to
have a keepsake of the concert marking his 80th birthday, will be
highly pleased to take a virtual trip to Poland through this offering.
Listeners with a more-casual interest in Penderecki’s work will have little reason to own this visualization
rather than any of the many fine audio recordings of his individual
compositions.
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