Vivaldi: Concertos for Two
Cellos; Piazzolla: Milonga. Julian and Jiaxin Lloyd Webber, cellos;
European Union Chamber Orchestra conducted by Hans-Peter Hofmann. Naxos. $9.99.
Barber: Violin Concerto; John
Corigliano: Lullaby for Natalie; Mason Bates: Violin Concerto. Anne Akiko
Meyers, violin; London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Leonard Slatkin. eOne.
$17.98.
Copland: Violin Sonata; Eric
Zeisl: Violin Sonata “Brandeis”; Menuchim’s Song; Bloch: Abodah; Robert Dauber:
Serenata. Zina Schiff, violin; Cameron Grant, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Byron Bellows: Music for
Saxophone and Orchestra. Javier Oviedo, saxophone; St. Luke’s Chamber
Ensemble conducted by Jean-Pierre Schmitt. MSR Classics. $12.95.
The traditional repertoire
is often not enough for solo performers these days – they want to look outside
the standards of classical music and, in some cases, create their own works to
showcase themselves. Julian and Jiaxin Lloyd Webber, for example, give a fine
performance of Vivaldi’s Concerto in G
minor for Two Cellos, RV 531, on a new Naxos CD. But that 10-minute work is
scarcely enough to fill a disc – and Vivaldi, although he wrote hundreds of
concertos for many single and double instruments, wrote only that single one for
two cellos. So Julian Lloyd Webber has arranged Vivaldi works for other
instruments, from mandolin to horn, for two cellos, and thus this CD features
world première recordings of
the two-cello versions of the concertos in G, RV 532 and RV 545; E minor, RV
409; F, RV 539; and G minor, RV 812. The pieces sound fine in these
arrangements – Vivaldi’s concertos are formulaic enough to sound “right” on
pretty much any instrument that can handle their technical requirements, which
means they work nicely when rearranged. The disc is a showcase for the soloists
and something of a curiosity, though, made more so by the final piece on it: a
world première recording of
Julian Lloyd Webber’s two-cello arrangement of Astor Piazzolla’s Milonga, from the Concerto for Bandoneon and Guitar. This last item is a peculiar
conclusion for a Vivaldi-focused CD, and the arrangement, while perfectly
acceptable, loses the flavor of the original in a way that the Vivaldi
arrangements do not. The soloists get able backing from the European Union
Chamber Orchestra under Hans-Peter Hofmann, and the disc will be of interest to
listeners who want to hear some fine cello performances, even of works whose
composers never intended them for this instrumental combination.
Anne Akiko Meyers plays
three violin pieces that certainly were intended for her instrument, but their
juxtaposition on a new eOne disc is rather unusual, and two of the three will
likely be unfamiliar to most listeners. Samuel Barber’s 1939 Violin Concerto has been controversial
from its creation because of the third movement, a perpetuum mobile that was rejected by Iso Briselli, the performer
for whom the work was written, as being too light in character to fit well with
the grander and deeper first two movements. A performer’s challenge in this
concerto is to choose whether to try to integrate the finale with what has come
before, or simply decide to take it for what it is and let it have its own impact
– the latter being Meyers’ approach. The result is a performance that feels
deep and committed for two movements and then lighter and brilliant at the end
– a bit disconnected, but certainly very effective. Meyers takes an analogous
approach to the 2012 concerto by Mason Bates (born 1977), whose three movement
titles give it an evolutionary and avian feeling: “Archaeopteryx,” “Lakebed
memories” and “The rise of the birds.” The music, which here receives its world
première recording, is a hybrid
of sorts (parallel in this way to the dinosaur/proto-bird Archaeopteryx),
mixing inspirations from Bach with what the composer calls “sparkling
electronica.” The movement from ground and water to sky is particularly clear
between the second movement and the third, and if the work seems a touch on the
too-clever side, it certainly has some telling virtuosic moments. The CD also
includes John Corigliano’s 2010 Lullaby
for Natalie, written for Meyers’ not-yet-born daughter and given her name
after her birth. Corigliano wrote the piece for violin and piano; the
orchestration heard here is by Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, and the music sounds
fine this way – and is played by Meyers, not surprisingly, with real tenderness.
The London Symphony Orchestra under Leonard Slatkin supports Meyers well
throughout. The disc does have one bizarre presentation element: it gives no
timings for any of the music, either on the packaging or in the enclosed
booklet – a very peculiar circumstance.
There are two world première recordings on a new MSR Classics
CD featuring violinist Zina Schiff and pianist Cameron Grant: Eric Zeisl’s Violin Sonata “Brandeis” (1949-50) and Menuchim’s Song (1939). Zeisl
(1905-1959) is best known, to the extent that he is known at all, as a film
composer – an unhappy one, who disliked the demands Hollywood made of him for
movies such as The Postman Always Rings Twice and Abbott and Costello
Meet the Invisible Man. Zeisl was Jewish, born in Vienna, and fled after
the Anschluss in 1938. He sought to
incorporate Jewish elements into essentially secular music, as in his moving and
emotive writing in Menuchim’s Song.
His sonata is larger-scale, its first movement especially extensive and
expressive, and reflects his time at Brandeis Summer camp between 1948 and
1950, where Zeisl (who became a teacher after leaving Hollywood) both taught
and promoted Jewish secular and folk music. The Zeisl sonata makes a very
interesting comparison with that of Copland, who was also Jewish but less
inclined to incorporate elements of Jewish music into his own except in such
works as Study on a Jewish
Theme (1929). The Copland sonata, only two-thirds the length of Zeisl’s,
dates to 1942-43 and shares some of the serenity and wistfulness of Appalachian Spring
(1944), coupled with a piano part somewhat reminiscent of the composer’s piano
sonata of 1939-41. The Jewish musical focus of this CD is completed by the
inclusion of Ernest Bloch’s Abodah: A Yom
Kippur Melody, which dates to 1928, and the 1942 Serenata by Robert Dauber (1922-1945) – this last being the only
Dauber composition that survived World War II, during which Dauber was
imprisoned in Theresienstadt and died in Dachau. Schiff and Grant play all the
works feelingly and with particular attentiveness to their emotional elements.
The relentless focus on this as Jewish music may somewhat limit the CD’s
appeal, but in fact these pieces have musical value beyond the religion and
culture that they reflect to varying degrees.
It
should not be thought that only string players are reaching out these days
beyond traditional repertoire. Classical saxophone players, for whom little
enough has been written that deserves to be deemed in the standard repertoire,
are among other soloists exploring new composers and compositions. Javier
Oviedo offers a whole disc of world première recordings – nine of them – aptly
labeled “Salon Music for Classical Saxophone” and written by Canadian composer
Byron Bellows. There is nothing profound here, no attempt to explore deep
emotions or to use the saxophone in anything other than a pleasingly mellow
way: the CD’s title, Lazy Afternoon,
is quite apt. That is also the title of one work here, the others being called In This House, J’attends le Printemps,
Simone—C’est Ma Folie, The Magic Chair, The Merry Go Round, Mein Trauer fur
Bluma (sic, rather than Mein Trauer für
Blumen), Three O’Clock, and Good
Night. Everything is mellifluous, nicely paced, and well balanced between
soloist and orchestra: the St. Luke’s Chamber Ensemble is a very fine group,
and Jean-Pierre Schmitt conducts it with sensitivity and style. The MSR
Classics CD is a short one, running less than 49 minutes, but there is enough
similarity among the pieces so that it seems longer – not to the point of
boredom, but to a point at which one has heard enough of these particular sonic
beauties and is ready to move on to others, if not with the saxophone then with
different instruments.
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