Zdeněk Fibich: Orchestral
Works, Volume 4—A Night at Karlštejn Castle; Comenius—Festival
Overture; The Jew of Prague—Overture; Hedy—Ballet Music; Hippodamia’s
Death—March; Tableaux Vivants—Prologue to the Opening of the New Czech Theatre,
The Great Musical Monograph of the Building of the National Theatre, Music for
the Reopening of the National Theatre, Music for the Celebration of the 300th
Anniversary of the Birth of Jan Amos Comenius. Czech National Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Marek Štilec.
Naxos. $9.99.
Buxtehude: Membra Jesu Nostri.
Duke Vespers Ensemble and Cappella Baroque conducted by Brian Schmidt. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
Sax Spectrum 2: New Music for
Alto and Soprano Saxophone. Glen Gillis, alto and soprano saxophone; Bonnie
Nicholson, piano; Richard Gillis, trumpet; James Cunningham, didgeridoo. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
Ástor Piazzolla: Five Tango Sensations; Oblivion; Robert Di
Marino: Concerto for Bandoneon and String Orchestra. Cesare Chiacchiaretta,
bandoneon; Croatian Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Miran Vaupotić. Naxos. $9.99.
Here are some CDs that
derive much of their pleasure from the sounds that the composers create and the
performers elicit – that is, the appeal here is not so much one of form or mental
appreciation as it is one of simple enjoyment of the skill with which composers
create aural beauty and performers bring it out. Of course, this is not to say
that the music is intended, like (say) much New Age and minimalist music,
simply as sound in which one’s consciousness floats. Every work here has its
point – but after listening to the recordings, a listener is as likely to be
carried away by the sheer sonic experience as by the more intellectual elements
underlying the musical works. The fourth volume of Naxos’ fine survey of the
orchestral works of Zdeněk
Fibich (1850-1900) includes some of his shorter works and ones for theatrical
projects, all of them very well played by the Czech National Symphony Orchestra
under Marek Štilec. None of the
pieces has significant depth; none seems designed to have any. Instead, what
each does is encapsulate a particular mood and explore it effectively and in
brief, with some very well-done orchestration. Inspired by a play, the concert
overture A Night at Karlštejn
Castle contrasts horn calls and wistful woodwinds with expressive string
themes. A more celebratory piece, Comenius—Festival
Overture was written in honor of the important 17th-century
Czech writer and teacher, Jan Amos Comenius; but it is not the history but the
sound of its ominous opening, Fibich’s use of lower brass, and the eventual
triumphant conclusion that will most engage listeners. The overture to the
tragedy The Jew of Prague has
memorable episodes of menace and drama. The ballet music from Fibich’s fourth
opera, Hedy, features picturesque and
effective use of percussion, a solo cello, and considerable grace in the
strings. The march from Hippodamia’s
Death, third in a trilogy of musical melodramas, has strong pacing and a
memorable use of harp. And then there are four works for the now-obsolete form
of tableaux vivants: “staged
pictures” presented a single time for a specific occasion and not intended to
be seen, nor their music to be heard, again. The four examples by Fibich are
short and to the point, with an appropriately celebratory sound, showing the
composer’s skill with (again) the harp, as well as his particular ability to
weave pleasant combinations of strings and woodwinds. Interestingly, Music for the Celebration of the 300th
Anniversary of the Birth of Jan Amos Comenius was written at the same time
as Comenius—Festival Overture and
uses the same theme, but is as brief and simply triumphal as the overture is extended
and multifaceted.
The sound world is very
different but equally enthralling in the performance by the Duke Vespers
Ensemble of Dietrich Buxtehude’s Membra
Jesu Nostri. The work’s full title, Membra Jesu Nostri Patientis Sanctissima, means "The
most holy limbs of our suffering Jesus" and consists of seven cantatas
addressing seven parts of Christ’s body – with stanzas of a Medieval hymn
interwoven with Biblical words (mostly from the Old Testament) that are taken
to be about Jesus’ feet, knees, hands, side, breast, heart, and head.
Considered the first Lutheran oratorio, Membra
Jesu Nostri contains no fewer than 43 movements and is scored for two
sopranos, alto, tenor and bass, plus two violins, basso continuo, and (in the
sixth cantata, Ad cor or “To the
heart”) a viola da gamba consort). The work is an extended one, lasting nearly
an hour, and highly expressive within the Baroque framework in which Buxtehude
composed. This MSR Classics recording features somewhat expanded forces – the Duke
Vespers Ensemble has about 20 members – and some subtle, engaged and highly
reverent phrasing of the musical material. A live recording, made at the Duke
University Chapel in 2013, the performance is particularly notable for the
warmth of the singers’ voices and the resonant beauty of the sound quality of
the university’s neo-Gothic chapel. Cappella Baroque, founded by Brian Schmidt
– who is Assistant Conductor of Chapel Music at Duke – uses period instruments,
which add an underpinning of richness and solidity to the vocal material here.
It is not necessary to follow the Latin or share Buxtehude’s (and Bach’s)
Lutheran faith to be transported by this work, written in 1680, to a region of
very considerable aural beauty.
The sound is also the big
attraction in an MSR Classics release featuring saxophonist Glen Gillis, but
here the music is somewhat too slight to be as involving as the works of Fibich
and Buxtehude, with the result that this CD gets a (+++) rating. It is
nevertheless a feast for the ears of saxophone lovers. Gillis (born 1956)
includes four works of his own and two co-written with others, all of them as
new as can be, dating to this year: Fantasia,
Aurora Australis, Celtic Air, Doppler Wah Wah Air Jig, Canis
Lupus (with James Cunningham, born 1954), and Spectrum Mashup (with Wayne Giesbrecht, born 1964). The works’
titles are reasonably descriptive of their sound, but they are not quite as
distinctive as those titles would seem to indicate: all showcase the
saxophone’s sonic qualities in somewhat different styles and somewhat different
ways, but all come across as being written more as display pieces than for the
purpose of communicating any particular non-superficial emotion or viewpoint. Sonically,
the most interesting of these is Canis
Lupus, because the blend and contrast of saxophone and didgeridoo is
unusual and sufficiently exotic to capture the ear effectively. Also on the CD
are two works by Richard Gillis: Shades
(2014) and Blues & Remembrance
(2009, on which the composer hauntingly plays the trumpet). There is a 2014
sonata called Making Changes by
Barbara York (born 1949) and a brief but effective two-movement work from 2012
called Narrative by David Kaplan
(born 1923). Also here is a 2014 piece by Paul Suchan (born 1983) called Danse Exotique des Gros Papillons, whose
intended exoticism would have been brought forth somewhat more effectively if
it had been directly followed on the CD by the Glen Gillis/Bonnie Nicholson
arrangement of part of The Butterfly
Lovers Violin Concerto by He Zhanhao (born 1933) and Chen Gang (born 1935).
This concerto is unusually effective in its original instrumentation in the way
it combines solo violin playing using Chinese techniques with tonal music written
for a Western orchestra. The Gillis/Nicholson arrangement shows that the piece
can be interesting to hear when arranged for saxophone and piano, although the
aural experience does not match that of the original work. There are a few
fairly substantial pieces on this CD, but by and large, the disc comes across
as a saxophone-encore showcase of sorts – and there is nothing wrong with that,
although nothing particularly profound about it either.
The sound of the bandoneon, which
is popular in several countries but seems to be a quintessentially Argentinian
instrument because of the way Ástor
Piazzolla (1921-1992) not only played it but also used it to transform the
entire experience of the tango, pervades a new Naxos CD with a strongly
international flavor. Hearing an extended bandoneon concerto by an Italian composer
– Roberto Di Martino (born 1956) – is itself enough to make a listener’s ears
perk up. And hearing the concerto played by an Italian virtuoso, Cesare
Chiacchiaretta (who started as an accordion player and then moved to the
bandoneon), with a Croatian orchestra and conductor, certainly gives a worldly flavor
to the whole listening experience. Di Martino’s concerto, which here receives
its world première recording,
is in the traditional three movements and does a good if not outstandingly
distinctive job of exploring the emotional compass of the bandoneon, from its
virtuoso capabilities to a rather surprising amount of sensual expressiveness.
This 22-minute work nevertheless pales before the four-minute Oblivion by Piazzolla, whose intensity
is quite striking and shows a sonic character that even listeners familiar with
the bandoneon may not realize that the instrument possesses. More familiar in
sound and expression are Piazzolla’s Five
Tango Sensations, which explore the dance form with which the composer is
most strongly associated. They perhaps try a bit too hard for the sort of
emotional involvement that comes across more meaningfully in Oblivion, but they have notable elements
of their own – and a particularly intriguing contrast between the third
movement, “Anxiety,” and the fifth, “Fear” (the others being called “Asleep,”
“Loving” and “Despertar”). Taken as a whole, this is a (+++) CD that, like the
Glen Gillis saxophone offering, will be of greatest interest to listeners who
simply want to immerse themselves in a particular instrument’s unique sound and
discover ways in which composers make that instrument expressive in a variety
of ways.