Music for Harp by J.S. Bach,
Elias Parish-Alvars, Michael Kimbell, Joaquín Turina and Henriette
Renié. Katrina Szederkényi,
harp. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Music for Flute and Piano by
Pierre Camus, Charles Koechlin, René-Emmanuel Baton, Albert Roussel,
Philippe Gaubert, Mélanie Bonis and Pierre Max Dubois.
Francesca Arnone, flute; Terry Lynn Hudson, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Music for Bassoon and Piano by
Boris Papandopulo, Benzion Eliezer, Tadeusz Baird and Luboš
Sluka. Maria Wildhaber, bassoon; Scott Pool, second bassoon; Mia Elezovic and Tania Tachkova, piano. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
Music for Strings and Orchestra
by David Kirtley, Robert Burrell, Rain Worthington, Raymond Bokhour, Daniel
Burwasser and Marvin Schluger. Navona. $16.99.
Carol Barnett: Choral Works.
Navona. $16.99.
Not all the music on these
unusual recent releases is equally involving, but every one of the CDs contains
some interesting pieces, and all
feature very fine, committed performances that successfully bring out the best
qualities that the various composers have to offer in these works. The Katrina
Szederkényi disc from MSR
Classics is more than a virtuoso showcase: it is a demonstration, if another
one is necessary, of just how good Bach’s music can sound even on instruments
for which it was not written. The Chromatic
Fantasy and Fugue, BWV 903, translates very well indeed to the harp, whose
plucked tone is, after all, not that different in the way it is produced from
the tone of the harpsichord, for which this fascinating piece was originally
written. Indeed, the transparency of sound that Szederkényi’s playing brings to the music, particularly the fugal
portion, provides genuine insights into Bach’s structure – as well as
considerable listening pleasure. Szederkényi
also does a marvelous job with Joaquín
Turina’s Tocata y Fuga—Cicle Pianístico
I, Op. 50, a work that harks back to Bach in spirit as well as form and
that moves from piano to harp almost as effectively as does Bach’s piece to
harp from harpsichord. The three other works on this CD are less impressive
musically, although still played with very considerable skill. Grande Fantaisie et Variations de Bravoure
sur des Motif Italiens by Elias Parish-Alvars (1808-1849) is something of a
find – a sprawling, ambitious piece that is harmonically conservative but that
shows considerable skill in the variation form. Parish-Alvars, whom Berlioz
described as “the Liszt of the harp” after hearing the Englishman perform,
exploits all the subtleties and grand gestures of which the harp is capable in
this music, and if the work is more a showpiece than anything else, it is
certainly one that gives Szederkényi
ample opportunity to display her sheer virtuosity. The remaining two works are
of somewhat less interest. Légende
d’après les Elfes de Leconte de Lisle by Henriette Renié (1875-1956) is a turn-of-the-20th-century
work that is pleasant enough but rather forgettable. And the world première
recording of Ballade Arctique (2013)
by Michael Kimball (born 1946) offers expressiveness but no especially deep
musical thoughts. Despite the unevenness of the selections, this is a highly
impressive recital by a first-rate harpist who shows herself adept in music
from several different time periods.
The flute is the focus of another MSR
Classics release, this one entitled Dedications
and featuring Francesca Arnone with pianist Terry Lynn Hudson. All the
music here is French, all the works date to the 20th century, and
each piece has a distinctly Gallic flavor. The most interesting are the finely
wrought 1913 Sonate pour Piano et Flûte
by the still-underrated Charles Koechlin (1867-1950) and the small but elegant
and poised Andante et Scherzo (1924) by
Albert Roussel (1869-1937). Also here are two very brief and nicely contrasted
movements from 1913 in Chanson et
Badinerie by Pierre Camus (1885-1948); a short Passacaille (1924) by René-Emmanuel
Baton (1 879-1949); and two small, encore-like works by Mélanie Bonis (1858-1937). None of
these brief pieces makes a particularly strong impression, but the two
remaining works on the CD – both sonatas – do. Deuxième Sonate pour Flûte et Piano (1924) by Philippe
Gaubert (1879-1941) is directly in the Romantic tradition, giving the flute
many opportunities for legato playing
and expressiveness. Sonate pour Flûte
et Piano (1959) by Pierre Max Dubois (1930-1993) is more aware of 20th-century
musical trends but nevertheless harks back to earlier French compositional
approaches. The grab-bag nature of this CD is such that flute lovers will be
its primary audience: little of the music stands out as exceptional, but all
the playing does.
A new MSR Classics
bassoon-and-piano disc focuses farther to the east in Europe, offering world
première recordings of music by
four composers whose names will almost surely be unknown to listeners – plus four
arrangements of Bulgarian folk songs by bassoonist Maria Wildhaber, herself
born in Bulgaria. The bassoon has spent some time climbing out of its
straitjacket as the comic member of the orchestra: Vivaldi took it seriously,
but in later years much music for the instrument was of the bubbly but inconsequential
type. Not so the works on this CD, which is called Eastern Discoveries: the composers here treat the bassoon as a
woodwind just as capable of multifaceted expressiveness as are other winds,
although they still allow a certain level of amusement to come through in
more-energetic pieces and movements. The 1969 sonata by Benzion Eliezer
(1920-1993), for example, concludes with an Allegro
assai e giocoso, and the Four
Preludes (1954) by Tadeusz Baird (1928-1981) conclude with one marked Allegro giocoso. The fine performances
are the attraction here, but neither Eliezer nor Baird has a great deal to say
in these works – indeed, the primary issue with this CD is that it is
delightful to hear once but has little staying power, the music being well-crafted
but far from compelling. Similarly, the two-movement sonata by Luboš Sluka (born 1928), written in 1954
and arranged for bassoon in 1971, is pleasant enough, and two short movements
by Boris Papandopulo (1906-1991), Elegy
and Scherzo, are nicely reflective of
their respective titles. The most involving works here, though, are the four
song arrangements, which were made in 2013 and are for two bassoons – and in
which Wildhaber and Scott Pool complement each other beautifully. The CD is mostly
a curiosity, but it is one that the musically curious should enjoy
The appeal of a Navona
anthology called Luminescence is a
bit more difficult to pin down: several of these orchestral pieces have
interesting elements, but none is so outstanding as to make purchase of the CD
for it alone worthwhile – and the six composers represented are heard for only
seven to 20 minutes apiece, so even listeners familiar with a particular
composer will not get enough material by him or her to make the disc an
attractive buy. Still, the performances are all dedicated, and listeners who
want to sample recent orchestral music may find the CD of interest. The longest
work here, Serenade for Strings by
Robert Burrell, inevitably calls up comparisons with similarly titled works by Tchaikovsky
and Dvořák, with which it does
not compare. Based loosely on the sounds of Australian birds, the work is
pleasant and flows well, and it is nicely played by the Moravian Philharmonic
Orchestra under Petr Vronský.
The same conductor and orchestra perform Within
a Dance—A Tone Poem of Love by Rain Worthington, a work that more-or-less
recalls Weber’s Invitation to the Dance
– but with less formality and more of a focus on the budding of a relationship
that begins during the dance itself. Leaves
Falling from the Holy Tree is David Kirtley’s exploration of Oglala Sioux
holy man Nicholas Black Elk, although the tone poem – played by the Kiev
Philharmonic under Robert Ian Winston – does not seem especially evocative of
anything more than a general mystical experience. New York, 2013 by Raymond Bokhour (played by the Moravian
Philharmonic Orchestra under Stanislav Vavrinek) and Manhattan Suite by Marvin Schluger (performed by the Warsaw
National Philharmonic Orchestra under John Yaffé) are both tributes to and personal experiences of New York
City, and while both are fine, neither seems particularly adventurous or
unusual in the type of focus it brings to the area. A smaller matter, and one
portrayed with greater grace and a welcome light touch, is the innocence of
childhood fun as heard in Catching
Fireflies by Daniel Burwasser, played by the Seattle Symphony Orchestra
under Gerard Schwarz. Disparate subjects, different compositional styles,
multiple orchestras – this is a CD for listeners who want a sampling of
contemporary music and the people who
create it.
Another Navona CD, entitled Treasures from the Archives, includes
only the work of a single composer, Carol Barnett (born 1949). It is a short CD
at only 44 minutes and is exclusively dedicated to vocal music, both original
and arranged. Most of the pieces here are performed by the Dale Warland
Singers, but other choirs also contribute, and all are fine and offer the music
with feeling. The 11 pieces are primarily but not exclusively religious in
orientation, with Barnett’s setting of the 12th-century Veni Sanctus Spiritus blending nicely
with her handling of spirituals such as By
and By and Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.
There is one interesting sacred-and-secular blend here in Children of the Heavenly Father, a Swedish folk song to which hymn
text has been added, and there is a nicely arranged Greek folk song called Dance of Zálongo as well. One
of the more intriguing concepts is a short piece called Remember the Ladies, which pays homage to the 1776 correspondence
of future president John Adams’ wife, Abigail, in which that well-known phrase
appears. Musically, no specific piece here stands out – all are well done and
handle the voices nicely – and the CD will likely be of interest primarily to
people who have themselves sung music by Barnett or who have heard it in the
past. Those who may have heard of Barnett’s vocal works and want a sampling of
them will also find the disc attractive; it is a specialty item for those who
want to hear this composer’s music for voices or who are particularly
interested in contemporary choral music.
Since the reviewer of my piece, "Leaves falling from the Holy Tree", obviously was not taken with it and dismissed it with one fell sentence (Infodad.com; September 25, 2014; Intriguing Mixtures; Music for Strings and Orchestra…), I would like to offer more background information about the piece, which should provide the reviewer and the reviewer’s readers with some broader and deeper insights into its nature.
ReplyDeleteLeaves falling from the Holy Tree was composed in 2001 in memoriam Nicholas Black Elk, holy man of the Oglala Sioux. As a teenager, I first read the book, Black Elk Speaks, an autobiography in which Black Elk recounts his spiritual journey from young boy to old man. This man’s life story had an enduring effect on my own spiritual quest and awareness of the world. The power and force of his great vision; the thrust and travels of his life; the melancholy that seemed to invade his later years, when as an old man he felt he had failed his people as a spiritual leader––all of these aspects are interwoven into the various textures, musical imagery, and emotions of this orchestral piece. Following is an excerpt from Black Elk’s account of his great vision.
“When we came to the end of the first ascent we camped in the sacred circle as before, and in the center stood the holy tree, and still the land about us was all green. Then we started on the second ascent, marching as before, and still the land was green, but it was getting steeper. And as I looked ahead, the people changed into elks and bison and all four-footed beings and even into fowls, all walking in a sacred manner on the good red road together. And I myself was a spotted eagle soaring over them. But just before we stopped to camp at the end of that ascent, all the marching animals grew restless and afraid that they were not what they had been, and began sending forth voices of trouble, calling to their chiefs. And when they camped at the end of that ascent, I looked down and saw that leaves were falling from the holy tree.”
Black Elk Speaks (Ch. 3, The Great Vision)
From Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux / Nicholas Black Elk, as told through John G. Neihardt. Published by the University of Nebraska Press.
Please keep in mind, that my piece, was humbly written with much love and respect for an American Indian holy man and American Indian cultures. Creating the piece involved much reading, research, and many years of listening to both traditional and modern American Indian music, as well as attending powwows where traditional dance and music can be observed firsthand and up-close. The piece is very specifically my reaction to, and impressions of, the mystical experiences and life of Nicholas Black Elk. If I had chosen to compose a work based on the mystical experiences of Wovoka, or Crazy Horse, or Saint Paul, or Saint Theresa, or Rumi, or Paramahansa Yogananda, the resulting composition would have been quite different and specific to my impressions of that individual’s mystical experiences. In the review the reviewer wrote, that my piece “does not seem especially evocative of anything more than a general mystical experience.” Pace, dear reviewer, I feel that you have done a great disservice to "Leaves falling from the Holy Tree".