Simon Mayr: Il sogno di
Partenope. Andrea Lauren Brown, Sara Hershkowitz, Caroline Adler, Florence
Lousseau, Cornel Frey, Robert Sellier, Andreas Burkhart; Bavarian State Opera
Chorus and Simon Mayr Chorus and Ensemble conducted by Franz Hauk. Naxos.
$9.99.
Chant: Missa Latina.
Cistercian Monks of Stift Heiligenkreuz and Ensemble Vox Gotica. Obsculta
Music. $18.99.
Chant: Into the Light.
Cistercian Monks of Stift Heiligenkreuz. Obsculta Music. $18.99.
Jake Schepps Quintet: Entwined—Music
of Marc Mellits, Matt McBane, Matt Flinner and Gyan Riley. Fine Mighty
Records. $12.99.
Here are some fascinating
discs that are of limited rather than general interest but that can be just the
thing for people looking to explore some less-often-visited corners of musical
repertoire. Il sogno di Partenope on
Naxos is part of a rather strange work, described on the CD as a “cantata
opera,” that was written for a specific occasion by Simon Mayr (1763-1845). The
reason it is only part of the piece is that the first act of the two-act work
has disappeared, so only the second act is presented in this world première recording. Dedicated to King
Ferdinand l on his birthday, the 1817 piece has a libretto by Urbano Lampredi
(1761-1838), well known in his time as a classicist and intellectual. Lampredi
and Mayr here create an allegorical cantata performed with recitatives and
arias that make it sound like an opera – in fact, Il sogno di Partenope is a kind of bridge between opera seria and 19th-century
operatic melodrama. Very little is obvious to modern listeners here. Even the
title requires explanation: it refers to the dream (really a nightmare) of
Parthenope, the tutelary goddess of Naples. The city’s Teatro San Carlos had
been destroyed by fire on November 12-13, 1816, and Il sogno di Partenope was written for the opening of the rebuilt
theater 11 months later. The missing first act of Mayr’s work focused on the
fire and the character who caused it, Polyphlegon, an entirely imaginary
mythological representation created to give the allegory a negative personage
to balance the positive ones. Gods, muses, genii and evil spirits (the last
group led by Polyphlegon) are involved in the cosmic cause at whose center is
the theater, which is deemed the Temple of the Muses. After the first-act
decline and destruction, the second act – the one recorded here – involves
restoration of the theater by Olympic forces. The sad event vanishes like a bad
dream – Mercury’s wand puts Parthenope to sleep – and a character known as Time
Personified allows the rebuilt theater to shine anew. At the very end,
Ferdinand is praised on his birthday for his beneficence and his gift to Naples
of the rebuilt, shining theater. Il sogno
di Partenope was intended to be performed only once, as was also the case
with other works in its genre, and hearing it (or half of it) shorn of context
is a distinctly odd experience. What we have here is part of a piece whose
totality would have been strange if it were available. Il sogno di Partenope happens to be quite well sung by the seven
soloists (three sopranos, mezzo-soprano, two tenors and bass) and nicely
handled by chorus members and instrumental musicians alike. A quartet with
chorus and the final chorus of jubilation are musically fairly interesting; the
remaining sections, all with their accompanied recitatives, are straightforward
within the allegorical context. There is good music here, if scarcely great
music, and the whole curiosity that is Il
sogno di Partenope shines a light on a long-neglected musical form. But it
is one whose neglect is rather understandable: there is little on this CD that
bears repeated hearings.
Two new Obsculta Music CDs
featuring the Cistercian Monks of Stift Heiligenkreuz in Austria feature not
allegory but straightforward and entirely orthodox religious material, much of
it traditional and anonymous and all of it sung with great purity of tone and a
strong sense of the singers’ involvement not only in the music but also in the
sentiments and beliefs underlying it. Both discs are expressions of supreme and
sublime faith, and both draw forth great beauty of sound from the Cistercian
Monks – all to proclaim and highlight the Latin texts. Missa Latina is the more interesting of the two CDs: its primary
offering is Ordo Missæ
in Lingua Latina (Missa de Sacratissimo Corde Jesu), but it also contains
the simple, straightforward and very moving Missa
sine Nomine by Guillaume Dufay (1397-1474), sung by Ensemble Vox Gotica,
plus – performed by the same group – the Dufay hymns Veni Creator Spiritus, Pange lingua and Ave, maria stella. Dufay, although writing in the same style as
that of others of his time, found ways to exalt and entrance listeners while
celebrating deeply held religious beliefs, and his music retains considerable
power even after an astonishing 600 years. Into
the Light has a more interesting arrangement of its music, although no
settings here match Dufay’s. The disc is set up in six sections: Missa Beatæ Mariæ
Virginis, Magnificat, Amor, Passio, Silentium, and Iubilatio, the last two of these being particularly heartfelt in
sound and interestingly unfamiliar in content. These are CDs for listeners deeply committed
to a faith shared with the singers, or one of considerable similarity: the
discs are more forms of heightened worship than they are performances, and one
must share in their sincerity in order to get their full effect.
At the opposite musical
extreme, in many and various ways, is a CD released by Fine Mighty Records and
called Jake Schepps Quintet: Entwined.
It is not just that this disc is wholly secular, nor that it is as up-to-date
as the Cistercian Monks’ recordings offer sound that is old and honored. The
entire spirit of the music and performances here is as wild and extroverted as
that of the Cistercian Monks is focused and inward-looking. The four pieces
here are Flatiron by Marc Mellits, Drawn by Matt McBane, Migrations by Matt Flinner, and Stumble Smooth by Gyan Riley – all
jazzlike titles that do indeed reflect one of the myriad of influences upon
this combinatorial music. The performers are Jake Schepps on banjo, Flinner on
mandolin, Enion Pelta-Tiller on violin, Ross Martin on guitar, and Eric Thorin
on bass – plus Ryan Drickey on violin in Drawn
and Grant Gordy on guitar in Flatiron.
The music uses the many capabilities of a bluegrass ensemble to explore works
whose provenance ranges from classical to jazz to pop to machine and electronic
sounds and techniques. Flatiron is in
eight movements that explore a wide range of emotions and a considerable number
of rhythms, contrasting hectic sections with almost-lyrical ones. Drawn, a five-movement work, is an odd
mixture of bluegrass instruments with modernistic compositional techniques. Migrations becomes modernistic, too, but
it builds to that category by starting with an old-time bluegrass approach and
working its way through a development connected loosely with traditional
classical music. And Stumble Smooth,
which functions as something of an encore, mixes multiple musical types in a
piece designed to show off the instrumentalists’ capabilities. Only listeners
enamored both of the bluegrass sound and of experimentation in the name of
combining multiple musical forms will likely appreciate this CD fully. The
prominence of banjo and mandolin can become rather grating over time, and the
composers’ various attempts to combine musical approaches are scarcely
seamless. Heard as an experimental disc that unites a particular performance sound
with forms of music for which that sound is not traditionally thought to be
suited, the CD is interesting, even intriguing, at least from time to time. But
the individual works are not particularly distinguished, and none of the
composers seems to have anything especially novel to say: all have written a
form of display piece that explores performers’ abilities but has little
communicative impact beyond an occasional “oh wow” moment resulting from a neat
turn of phrase or unusually virtuosic bit of instrumental ostentation.
No comments:
Post a Comment