Saint-Saëns: Carnival of the Animals;
Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso, transcribed by Claude Debussy; Variations
on a Theme of Beethoven. Ferhan and Ferzan Önder, pianos; Zürcher
Kammerorchester conducted by Howard Griffiths. Christophorus. $14.99.
Scarlatti: Sonatas K96, 381, 119,
197, 135, 322, 109, 141, 492, 146, 11, 17, 27, 87, 380, 209, 101 and 29. Igor
Kamenz, piano. Naïve. $16.99.
Scott Pender: Music for Piano and
Strings—Veil of Ignorance; Rhapsody, Elegy and Finale for Violin and Piano;
Sonata for Viola and Piano; Sonata for Cello and Piano. New England String
Trio (Julia Okrusko, violin; Lilit Muradyan, viola; Ming-Hui Lin, cello); Peter
Sulski, violin and viola; David Russell, cello; Geoffrey Burleson, piano. Navona.
$16.99.
Music for a Princess—works by
J.S. and C.P.E. Bach, Buxtehude, and Nicolaus Bruhns. Annette Richards,
organ. Loft Recordings. $18.99.
Yves Ramette: Organ Music.
Yves Ramette, organ. Navona. $19.99 (2 CDs).
Considered as a work for two
pianos rather than a jocular, lighthearted portrayal in music of multiple
creatures, Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals is music
requiring considerable virtuosity and a fair amount of nuance. The section
called Pianists is, of course, purely
for amusement, with the two performers sounding as if they are walking
impatiently back and forth in a cage, like many animals in zoos of old. But the
rest of the work is considerably more subtle where the pianos are concerned,
requiring very different treatment in, for example, Royal March of the Lion, from what is needed in Aquarium and Aviary. It is the subtlety of Ferhan and Ferzan Önder that makes their 1997
performance of this work, now available as a Christophorus release, so
delightful to hear and at the same time so aptly amusing – and the
accompaniment by the Zürcher
Kammerorchester under Howard Griffiths is in entirely the same spirit. The
result is a thoroughly engaging performance. Debussy’s transcription of the
violin showpiece, Introduction and Rondo
Capriccioso, is another matter: the transcription itself is very well done,
and certainly the work is quite well played here, but this music is distinctly
violinistic rather than pianistic, and falls somewhat flat despite the quality
of the Önders’ performance. There
is no such quibble, however, about their handling of the Variations on a Theme of Beethoven, an infrequently heard Saint-Saëns piece originally written for two
pianos and displaying considerable skill with the variation form as well as
what is clearly a heartfelt tribute to a composer whom Saint-Saëns greatly admired.
Igor Kamenz clearly admires
Domenico Scarlatti, and there is no question that his playing on a new Naïve CD
is at the highest level. That is the good news. But while the performance
itself is a (++++) one, listeners who remember that Scarlatti composed his
wonderful sonatas for harpsichord rather than piano will find this more of a
(+++) release – giving Kamenz full credit for skill but not for the way he
expands the sonatas and fully utilizes the piano’s sound palette. There are
some composers whose work seems often to transcend the instruments on which it
is played – Bach is the clearest example – and certainly pianists have long
since adopted Scarlatti’s music as their own. But Kamenz here seeks to make 18
of the 555 sonatas into something they were never intended to be: a kind of
suite, organized by key, content and emotional impact. This is interesting, but
it is not Scarlatti. It is far more justifiable, for example, to present a
selection of the sonatas by giving some of the earlier ones, then some of the
middle-period ones with their enormously complex hand-crossings, and then some
of the later ones – in which the hand-crossings largely disappear and the
emotional compass takes center stage. Kamenz, however, deliberately juxtaposes
sonatas from Scarlatti’s fairly well-delineated compositional periods, then
performs the works with fluency and even pathos beyond what the harpsichord can
communicate. The result is a highly effective Kamenz piano disc that is not a highly effective Scarlatti one. Admirers of first-rate
pianism will revel in this recording; Scarlatti aficionados, however, most
likely will not.
The audience is certain to
be smaller for the Scott Pender music on a new (+++) Navona CD entitled 88+12, an overly cute reference to the
use of the piano’s 88 keys and the 12 strings of violin, viola and cello
combined. Actually, only Veil of
Ignorance (2010, revised 2011 and 2013) fits the “88+12” description, and
it is a work filled with gestures, from the dramatic to the lyrical and from
the modernistic/minimalist to the almost-Romantic. The title refers to the work
of philosopher John Rawls (1921-2002), who is unlikely to be familiar to most
listeners and whose thinking is in any case not reflected in the music in any
particularly apparent way. The “veil of ignorance” concept is a form of social
contract in which participants do not know in advance where they stand in an
imagined society. That would seem to invite aleatoric music, which, however, is
not what Pender produces. However, listeners, unlike the performers, may find
themselves somewhat unsure about where they are at any given time during the
three movements of Veil of Ignorance.
The remaining three works on this CD are “88+4” ones, and they are more
immediately appealing. Rhapsody, Elegy
and Finale for Violin and Piano (2009), its title but not its sensibility
reminiscent of Schumann’s Overture,
Scherzo and Finale, is filled with mood and textural contrasts. Sonata for Viola and Piano (2009) is a
more-intense work, subtitled “From Old Notebooks” because Pender created it
using material he sketched in the 1980s. Sonata
for Cello and Piano (2009, revised 2013) is the longest work on the disc
and a piece of considerable lyricism and mostly deliberate pace. All the
performers handle the music with considerable skill and a level of
give-and-take that is appropriate for even the most recently written chamber
music. The solidity of the piano parts in the three works for solo string
instruments helps anchor the music effectively.
There is fine keyboard
playing of another sort, on the organ, in a recital by Annette Richards of
music from the library of Prussian Princess Anna Amalia – who, like Anna
Magdalena Bach, maintained a “notebook” (really an extensive music collection)
of works that she herself played. A number of these works were in fact by J.S. Bach;
those performed here include the Fantasia
and Fugue, BWV 537; the Pièce
d’Orgue, BWV 572; “Schmücke dich, O liebe Seele,” BWV 654;
and “Ich ruf zu dir,” BWV Anh. II 73,
arranged by C.P.E. Bach – whose own Sonata
in G minor, a comparatively forward-looking work, also appears on the CD.
In addition, Richards offers Buxtehude’s Toccata
in F, BuxWV 156, and “Nun komm, der
heiden Heiland,” the only surviving chorale fantasia by Nicolaus Bruhns
(1665-1697). There is also a brief Duetto
(Fugue) here by Princess Anna Amalia herself. Richards performs on a new (2011)
Cornell University organ modeled on the 1706 Schnitger instrument of
Charlottenburg Castle, Berlin; this is the first recording of the new Anabel
Taylor Chapel organ. The melding of the new instrument with this particular
blend of music is not always ideal, given the difference in sonic quality
between the Cornell space and that of old Berlin. But Richards’ performances
themselves are well-proportioned and carefully structured – although the works
do not flow from one to the next in any particularly apposite sequence. This
Loft Recordings release is a (+++) CD featuring fine playing of some music that
is, in the main, not especially unusual; the “library of the princess” frame is
more a convenience than a doorway to any particular profundity.
The solo-organ music of Yves
Ramette (1921-2002) is a doorway not only into the composer’s thinking but also
into his performing: the works on a new two-CD Navona release were recorded by
Ramette between 1965 and 1993. Ramette played a Cavaillé-Coll organ in Paris, with all the grandeur implied by that
instrument’s provenance coming forth in the four pieces heard here. An extended
Toccata et Fugue is titled “In
Memoriam Georges Guynemer” and is a tribute to the World War I flying ace
(1894-1917); the work has all the grand gestures one would expect from its form
as well as its dedication. Pour une Nuit
de Noël is a three-movement celebration of the religious meaning
of the season. Solum in Modum is a
lengthy two-movement work in which Ramette carefully explores old forms in
movements called Concerto and Riccercare. And Pastorale, which is also quite extended, ventures beyond its title
into general expressions of beauty and wonder. The music could probably have
fit on a single CD – the first disc here lasts only 28 minutes, the second 54 –
but releasing it on two may encourage listeners to hear only some of it at any
given time. The music benefits from that treatment: it is well-constructed and
clearly heartfelt, but elements of several of the pieces are on the portentous
and even pompous side, and Ramette does not always sustain throughout a work
the moods and emotions he evokes early on. This (+++) release will be of
considerable interest to anyone familiar with Ramette who wants to hear him as
performer as well as composer. The music here is not, however, as readily
accessible to listeners unfamiliar with Ramette as are some of his works for
orchestra or instruments other than the organ.
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