McCormick Percussion Group:
Between Rock and a Hard Place—Music of Ciro Scotto, John Cage and Dan Senn.
Ravello. $14.99.
Heidi Jacob: Winter Light; String
Quartet I; Regard á Schubert: a Fantasy Impromptu; Fantasy for solo piano;
Salome Revisited. Navona. $16.99.
Mary Ann Joyce-Walter: Immortal
Diamond. St. Petersburg State Symphony Orchestra conducted by Vladimir
Lande. Ravello. $12.99.
It has become commonplace
for contemporary composers to draw their musical influences not only from the
classical realm but also from other forms of music once thought to be
incompatible with classical construction and sounds. Indeed, this is so common
nowadays that it can be difficult to distinguish one composer’s work that draws
on, say, rock and Eastern influences, from that of another composer who draws
on the same material. Furthermore, as today’s composers use more and more
instruments generally associated with other forms of music, the difficulty of
distinguishing one person’s work from that of the next is compounded. This may
not really matter to listeners – either they like what they hear or they do not
– but it complicates the whole experience of listening to modern “classical”
music and trying to decide whether to buy and live with works by any specific
composer. The latest McCormick Percussion Group CD for Ravello, for example,
includes not one but two separate pieces by Ciro Scotto called Between Rock and a Hard Place. One
version is designated “Plugged” and the other “Unplugged.” The former, which is
separated into four movements and lasts some 28 minutes, incorporates heavy
metal into what is supposed to be a classical milieu, ending up sounding not
much like either form – although its emphasis is clearly on the heavy-metal
side, prominently featuring a drum set as well as electric guitar, keyboards,
electric bass and quite a lot of percussion. The latter version is shorter,
running less than 17 minutes as a single movement, and includes acoustic guitar
and cello – and although it explores some of the same material, it does not
really sound much like the “plugged” form of the work. Listeners may prefer one
version of this work or the other, but it is difficult on the basis of either
form of the piece to decide whether other music by Scotto would be attractive
to hear. Actually, this CD is primarily for people who have already decided
that they like Scotto’s material, because the three remaining works on the disc
are essentially fillers, all having been created without specifying the
instruments on which they are to be played and therefore allowing the McCormick
Percussion Group to handle them pretty much at will. And so they do: John
Cage’s Five features bowed
vibraphones, his Composition for Three
Voices uses two vibraphones and marimba, and Dan Senn’s Rivus is played on celeste, glockenspiel
and vibraphone. It is difficult in all three works to say what makes them
“music” rather than “sounds,” and indeed that seems to be part of the
composers’ points – certainly Cage’s (he made this point in a great deal of his
oeuvre). Listeners who enjoy the
specific sounds heard in these three works need to remember that the same works
would sound very different on other instruments. In all, this CD is for people
looking for an aural experience that intersects the traditional world of music –
classical and otherwise – but does not fit entirely within it.
The experience of Heidi
Jacob’s music lies in somewhat more traditional venues, although her music
certainly sounds modern and makes use of standard contemporary compositional
techniques. Jacob’s Winter Light
(2012) is an attempt to use violin (played by Barbara Govatos) and piano (played
by Charles Abramovic) to expand musically on the themes of Ingmar Bergman’s
1962 film of that name. Certainly the 12-tone and minimalist techniques so
beloved of today’s composers are clear here, and certainly the fluidity of the
violin contrasts with the more-deliberate presentation of the piano. Whether
all this parallels Bergman’s exploration of existence and divinity will be a
matter of opinion – as will the question of whether the work will have meaning
for anyone unfamiliar with Bergman’s film. Jacob’s String Quartet I (2009) – which is entitled (with ellipses and
quotation marks) “…on enameled tablets…” – is inspired by poetry and written in
traditional three-movement form, but again seems designed to communicate
primarily to people who already know what Jacob is talking about. It is
well-played by the Momenta String Quartet (Emilie-Anne Gendron and Adda
Kridler, violins; Stephanie Griffin, viola; Michael Haas, cello). Also
well-handled, by pianist Abramovic, are Regard
á Schubert: a Fantasy Impromptu (2008), which is inspired by Schubert’s C
minor impromptu, Op. 90, No. 1, but is less Schubertian than it is
demonstrative of harmonic settings from Schubert’s time to the 21st
century; and Fantasy for solo piano (2005),
which does actually approximate traditional notions of piano fantasies in its
contrasts of lyrical and virtuosic passages. Finally, the CD includes Salome Revisited (2006), a work for
electroacoustic tape that again takes off from a classical source – here,
Richard Strauss’ 1905 opera Salome –
but again seems designed primarily to showcase the composer’s virtuosity in the
way it makes use of musical themes and spoken texts from the stage work. This
Navona disc does show Jacob to be a composer of considerable range within
modern compositional criteria, but there is little here beyond a skill at
reprocessing that sets her music apart from that of others using similar
creative techniques.
Like Jacob, Mary Ann
Joyce-Walter looks to the past for Immortal
Diamond (1970), a work she wrote in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. The
past here is the time of Bach, specifically the St. Matthew Passion, but the musical connection is tenuous at best.
Joyce-Walter assembles Immortal Diamond
from bits of the Bible and a series of excerpts from poetry by Gerard Manley
Hopkins, T.S. Eliot, Robert Frost and others – with a bit of Alice in Wonderland thrown in as well.
The textual juxtapositions and orchestral material are intended somehow to show
the importance of King to the composer and, by extension, to listeners, but the
work comes across more as a hodgepodge of sound than as a well-directed, well-organized
tribute. Joyce-Walter seems to see Immortal
Diamond as an immersive experience, and certainly Vladimir Lande and the
St. Petersburg State Symphony Orchestra handle the music with sensitivity and
compassion. But while Joyce-Walter’s feelings for and about King are no doubt
sincere, they do not come through with any particular clarity to an audience
beyond the composer herself. There is a self-referential quality to the music
on this Ravello CD, a degree of what seems to be intentional obscurity, just as
there is in many other works by contemporary composers – a sense that the
material was really created for the composer rather than for anyone else who
might happen to listen to it. Those who are both strongly devoted to King and
familiar with Joyce-Walter’s work may be willing to spend $12.99 for this
30-minute recording, but it scarcely seems to reach out to anyone beyond that
core group.
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