James M. Stephenson: The Devil’s
Tale—A Sequel to Stravinsky’s “L’Histoire du Soldat.” Matt Bean, narrator;
Western Illinois University Faculty Chamber Players (Julieta Mihai, violin;
Matt Hughes, contrabass; Eric Ginsberg, clarinet; Douglas Huff, bassoon; Bruce
Briney, trumpet; John Mindeman, trombone; Rick Kurasz, percussion) conducted by
Mike Fansler. Ravello. $16.99.
Midgard. La Mandragore
(Ingried Boussaroque, Seán
Dagher, Grégoire Jeay, Alex
Kehler, Andrew Wells-Oberegger, Amanda Kesmaat). Big Round Records. $14.99.
Il Trionfi di Dori—Madrigals.
The King’s Singers (David Hurley and Timothy Wayne-Wright, countertenors; Paul
Phoenix, tenor; Christopher Bruerton and Christopher Gabbitas, baritones;
Jonathan Howard, bass). Signum Classics. $17.99.
Dvořák: Symphony No. 9,
“From the New World”; Varèse: Amériques. Seattle
Symphony conducted by Ludovic Morlot. Seattle Symphony Media. $16.99.
Ridiculously ambitious and
remarkably successful, James Stephenson’s The
Devil’s Tale is a thoroughly fascinating continuation of, updating of,
commentary upon and expansion of Stravinsky’s L’Histoire du Soldat, using the same instrumental complement that
Stravinsky employed and channeling Stravinsky’s wit, sense of the fabulous (in
the sense of telling a fable), and dramatic sensibility. Familiarity with
Stravinsky’s work is an absolute necessity for full enjoyment of Stephenson’s,
which literally begins where Stravinsky’s ends by reprising the conclusion of
the 1918 piece. Indeed, it is easy to conceive of a marvelous theatrical
evening in which the Stravinsky is the first part and, after intermission, the
Stephenson is played and performed – for at the end of Stephenson’s piece, we
are right back at the beginning of Stravinsky’s. This circularity is reflected
in the titles for the sections of The
Devil’s Tale, which are palindromes, including “Never Odd or Even,” “Devil
Never Even Lived,” “Name No One Man,” and “Live, O Devil, Revel Ever! Live! Do
Evil.” This is more than mere cleverness, just as the music’s reflection of
Stravinsky is more than mere imitation. For example, Stravinsky’s three dances
of the resurrected princess (Tango, Valse, Ragtime) have their parallel in
three Stephenson dances called Cigar,
Toss It in a Can, and It Is So
Tragic. Stephenson places his work in modern Las Vegas, an apt location for
continuing a fairy tale whose moral has to do with the impossibility of “having
it all.” Stravinsky’s soldier becomes a pit musician who awakes after having
just dreamt the entirety of L’Histoire du
Soldat. This is a perfectly acceptable device: the entire second act of
Gilbert and Sullivan’s Ruddigore has
sometimes been performed as a dream sequence, and even Wagner’s Der fliegende Holländer has been staged
(admittedly with less success) as a
dream in Senta’s disordered mind. In any case, having Stephenson’s protagonist,
Joe, awake to discover he is in Las Vegas with his showgirl girlfriend, Hannah,
is a wonderful way to get the action moving – and gravitating toward the Devil
in the person of Sam, who is Hannah’s manager and a blackjack dealer. A series
of narrations – Matt Bean handles the multiple voices extremely well – connects
musical numbers that are positively redolent of Stravinsky and also,
occasionally, reminiscent of Kurt Weill. The basic plot here is that of the
trickster tricked: Sam eventually comments that Joe has caught him in his
butterfly net (one of many direct references to Stravinsky, in whose work the
Devil initially appears as an old man with a butterfly net). The upshot of the
story – whose music weaves wonderfully into the tale-telling, just as it does
in Stravinsky’s piece – is that Joe and Hannah escape the Devil’s clutches and,
indeed, Las Vegas itself. But at the end, they are walking with their bags
along a hot and dusty road – exactly the place where L’Histoire du Soldat begins. So what have they really accomplished,
if Hannah’s suggestion that they “begin again” simply leads, indeed, to
beginning again? Stephenson is extremely clever throughout The Devil’s Tale in both music and narrative, and although the work
is self-limited by the need to know L’Histoire
du Soldat, this Ravello recording shows it to be attractive enough on its
own so that perhaps some listeners might be willing to try it first and then go
back to Stravinsky to find out where the story began (if a circle can ever be
said to begin).
The performers of La
Mandragore reach back much further in time for a Big Round Records recording
called Midgard (the Norse word for
Middle-earth, as lovers of Norse mythology and the works of J.R.R. Tolkien fans
likely know already). The idea here is that the Vikings, of whose everyday
lives (beyond their seafaring and battles) not much is known, almost certainly
had music of some sort to tell their stories and celebrate their heroes. And if
they did, they would have played the works on such instruments as the recorder,
nay flute, shawm, cittern and oud. This is a bit of an exaggeration: the
zither-like cittern, for example, is a Renaissance instrument, although
presumably an ancestral form could have existed in Viking times (indeed,
Vikings are known to have played instruments including versions of harps,
violins, lyres and lutes). La Mandragore is an original-instrument ensemble
that specializes in playing very old instruments akin to those the Vikings
could have used – and those instruments have an odd, sometimes almost
unearthly, sometimes very earthy sound in folk dances such as the polska and
halling, which are among the features of Midgard.
The songs and stories sung and, to an extent, declaimed here are presented in Old
Norse, Swedish, Norwegian and French; and again, if all these except Old Norse
are cognates of the language the Vikings would have spoken rather than examples
of it, there is no claim here to absolute historical authenticity. The
attraction of this recording lies in its attempt to reach back far, far into
time to produce the type of music
that a warlike, seafaring and extremely bold (and much-feared) group might have used to entertain itself. The
12 tracks on the CD are remarkably effective in generating a sense of
otherworldliness, if not necessarily the dim past. There are, for example,
songs and stories here about warriors (Kassias
Saga), outlaws (Grettis Saga),
and shepherdesses (Ingrieds Lilja).
The presentation of the material is uniformly excellent, with all members of La
Mandragore except cellist Amanda Kesmaat providing vocals at some point in
addition to their instrumental contributions. Midgard is scarcely a clear window into the past, but it is a
fascinating, even exhilarating way to explore a possible past through music that has considerable charm and a
character quite unlike that with which modern listeners are likely to be
familiar.
A few hundred years after
Viking times, in the early 16th century, there emerged the madrigal,
which quickly became a highly popular form of secular choral music. The King’s
Singers celebrate the form on a Signum Classics CD entitled Il Trionfi di Dori, offering 29 samples
by 29 different composers, of whom a few are still well-known (G. Gabrieli,
Palestrina), a number were quite famous in their own time (Giovanni de Macque, Tiburtio
Massaino), but most are now quite obscure. The skill of the King’s Singers is
everywhere in evidence here: the perfect blending of different vocal ranges,
the first-rate enunciation, the ability to make works whose form and length are
virtually identical sound distinctive through skillful changes of emphasis and
careful attention to rhythmic detail. The King’s Singers’ sound is a
homogeneous one; but at the same time, the individual voices within the
ensemble come through with clarity and emerge as appropriate from within the
overall choral presentation. An hour and a quarter of these madrigals is, in
truth, a bit much, since all the pieces are, after all, written for similar
vocal ranges, and each lasts roughly two to three minutes. Furthermore, there
is little to choose among the works in terms of enjoyment: listeners will like
most or all of them, or will not care for the disc at all. It is the sound of
the performers, as much as the interest value of the music, that is the major
attraction here: the CD is a feast for the ears, to mix a metaphor. The music
itself focuses, as madrigals usually did, on love and on mythological themes;
the disc’s title is that of a 1592 madrigal collection first published in
Venice and dedicated to a nobleman who commissioned the 29 poems. Structurally,
the works use the mythological figure of the sea-nymph Dori, daughter of
Oceanus, to praise the nobleman’s wife; the recurrent concluding phrase Viva la bella Dori makes the intention
of the collection plain. But if Il
Trionfo di Dori is clearly a relic of its time, the performance of the
music by the King’s Singers is something else: a beautifully modulated
presentation that showcases, again and again, this group’s exceptional ability
to make the music of hundreds of years ago come vividly alive for modern
listeners.
The music is considerably
more recent and considerably more familiar on a new Seattle Symphony CD on the
orchestra’s own label – but here too the concept is to take a new look at the
past and thereby produce a disc of interest to listeners of the present. Unfortunately,
the works chosen here are on the obvious side, and while the live performances
by the Seattle Symphony under Ludovic Morlot are fine, they are scarcely
revelatory. Interestingly, there is a fairly strong Stravinsky connection to
Edgard Varèse’s Amériques, although not to the
extent that exists in Stephenson’s The
Devil’s Tale. The Varèse
work, a sonic portrait of New York City written in 1918-21 and revised in 1927,
directly quotes The Rite of Spring
(as well as works by Schoenberg and Mahler) and makes its points structurally
through juxtaposition of self-contained blocks of sounds – a Stravinskian
approach. Amériques is,
however, most famous for its portrayal of urban cacophony through the use of
sirens, strong dissonance, and polyphonic wind and percussion segments. It is,
in short, a big, brassy, intense work, the first composed by Varèse after he moved to the United
States, and as strong in its portrayal of urban America as Gershwin’s far more
tuneful An American in Paris (1928)
is of urban life in France. Morlot sustains the dynamism of Amériques throughout, and the
orchestration is as effective as always, but there is little sense of
almost-ready-to-burst excitement here: the whole interpretation is just a bit
too well-mannered for such a viscerally powerful work. As for Dvořák’s thrice-familiar Symphony No. 9,
this has always been subtitled as a symphony from the New World, not of
the New World – overstating its “American-ness” is misguided, since it is at
heart a Czech Romantic symphony that just happens to incorporate tunes picked
up by the composer in the United States. The best performances highlight the ways
in which Dvořák’s final
symphony represents continuity, if perhaps not exactly culmination, of his
symphonic oeuvre. Morlot’s reading is
fine, but neither it nor the Seattle Symphony’s playing is especially idiomatic
– the strings, for example, are quite good, but not as lush and rich-sounding
as those of European orchestras in this symphony, and the distinctively Czech
rhythms of the work (notably in the Scherzo)
are not given with as much emphasis as they could be. The most interesting
thing about this (+++) disc is simply the fact that these two particular works
share it: the programming concept is an intriguing one, even if the
performances themselves, while convincing enough, are not quite at a high
enough level to make it possible to recommend the recording unreservedly.
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