Moto Continuo: Music of Osias
Wilenski, Nicholas Anthony Asciotti, Diane Jones, John A. Carollo, Robert
Fleisher, and Brian Noyes. Trio Casals (Sylvia Ahramjian, violin; Ovidiu
Marinescu, cello; Anna Kislitsyna, piano). Navona. $16.99.
Robert J. Martin: 100 Views of
Mt. Fuji: 100 Pieces in 100 Minutes—Homage to Hokusai; stone & feather;
Neely Bruce: Improvisations; Homage to Seb. Shirley Blankenship and Neely
Bruce, piano. Ravello. $19.99 (2 CDs).
Tornado Project: Trios for Flute,
Clarinet and Computer by Ricardo Climent, Robert Rowe, Paul Wilson, Andrew May,
Eric Lyon, and Russell Pinkston. Elizabeth McNutt, flute; Esther Lamneck, clarinet.
Ravello. $16.99.
A John Williams Celebration.
Itzhak Perlman, violin; Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by Gustavo Dudamel.
C Major DVD. $24.99.
By the Red: Folk Songs from the
Red River Valley. Mel Braun, baritone; Laura Loewen, piano; Fred Redekop,
mandolin; Jay Taylor, bass; Greg Gardner, percussion. Big Round Records.
$14.99.
Light of Gold: Cappella SF
Christmas. Cappella SF conducted by Ragnar Bohlin. Delos. $16.99.
Anthology audio projects are
inevitably searches for variety, hopefully within an overall context that makes
both aural and intellectual sense to listeners. The context of Navona’s CD
entitled Moto Continuo (not to be
confused with moto perpetuo, although
clearly related to it) is not, however, a singular one. Five of the six works
are for piano trio – but the sixth, Robert Fleisher’s Ma Mère, is for cello solo. Three of the six tie into and comment
upon earlier pieces: Fleisher’s is based on Jeux
de Vagues from Debussy’s La mer,
with Fleisher’s title and Debussy’s making a French pun (“mother” and “sea”); Brian
Noyes’ Piano Trio is titled as being
“in the spirit of Ave Maris Stella,”
a 1975 piece by Peter Maxwell Davies; and Osias Wilenski’s Variations for Trio is based on a portion of Beethoven’s Große Fuge, Op. 130. One piece on
this CD ties to an earlier work by the composer himself: Nicholas Anthony
Asciotti’s Adirondack Tableau,
adapted from his earlier Adirondack
Suite. The remaining two works relate to the natural world but not to
specific other pieces of music: Diane Jones’ Three Songs briefly portrays a city street scene, a mountain
tableau, and a “Sky Song,” in which a spirit watches from above; and John A.
Carollo’s Piano Trio No. 1 was
inspired by the terrorist murders of September 11, 2001. Such a mixed bag of
music produces, not surprisingly, mixed responses. Fleisher’s piece is rather
incomprehensible for anyone who is not intimately familiar with the Debussy on
which it is based. Noyes’ is less directly tied to the Davies piece in whose
spirit it was written, although knowledge of that work certainly makes the
rhetorical gestures of Noyes easier to comprehend. Wilenski’s trio stands well
enough on its own so that even listeners not highly familiar with Beethoven’s Große Fuge can appreciate it –
although Noyes’ second movement, in particular, gains in clarity if listeners
do know the Beethoven. Asciotti’s piece is not particularly evocative of the
Adirondacks, or indeed of any specific landscape, and comes across better if
heard as absolute rather than image-focused music. Jones’ work, on the other
hand, does make a genuine effort to reflect specific places, although it is
rather obvious in doing so. And Carollo’s trio, whatever its impetus, is a work
of some depth and strength, a touch long-winded but generally effective. This
CD will be of most interest to people familiar with Trio Casals, which performs
all the works with fine individual and ensemble playing.
The two-CD Ravello set whose
major work, 100 Views of Mt. Fuji,
takes up even more than the 100 minutes its title claims (closer to 106), is
really only for people who know the art of Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849)
beyond his most famous portrayal of a huge foreground wave with Mt. Fuji in the
background. In terms of pieces intended to evoke specific images, Robert J.
Martin’s stands out for the precision with which he tries to translate Hokusai
art into sound: every movement of Martin’s work bears a title that listeners
must know in order to comprehend what the composer is trying to portray (A Fast Ascent, Purple, Evening in the Shadow
of Fuji, Swimming Through Moonlight, Different Worlds, Lanterns Moving on the
Mountain, and so on – and on). Listening to the music without knowing the
movements’ titles is a lost cause: nothing coming from the piano (which Shirley
Blankenship plays with a fine mixture of strength and delicacy) actually sounds much like what the titles say, so
listeners must familiarize themselves with those titles and then try to
understand why the composer wrote particular pieces to go with particular
scenes. Certainly 100 Views of Mt. Fuji
is a highly ambitious work, but it is not a particularly engrossing one on a
strictly musical basis – listeners must actively engage themselves in relating
concrete portrayals of scenes rendered by Hokusai with the necessarily abstract
impressions delivered by music, which Leonard Bernstein once famously pointed
out “does not mean anything.” A
similar relationship between concrete and abstract is called for in Martin’s
much shorter stone & feather, whose
title shows the composer’s intention of contrasting heavier and lighter musical
elements. Also on this recording are two works by Neely Bruce. Homage to Seb is another contemporary
piece that harks back to something much earlier, in this case to the music of
Bach, which Bruce treats as an opportunity to explore atonality in much the way
that Bach so assiduously investigated tonality. The work is rhythmically
interesting, if not particularly profound. Bruce’s Improvisations is a set of 13 short pieces in which Bruce, like
Martin in his tribute to Hokusai, tries to guide listeners in specific
directions by presenting them with titles that are keys to what the music is
supposed to portray: Frost into Flame,
The Vast Night Brooded, Across the Summer Grain, The Feline Sea, etc. Bruce’s
work, like Martin’s, does not really pin down the visual images evoked by the
titles, but listeners willing to strain a bit to hear what the composer intends
will find those titles to be reasonably helpful touchstones.
The variety inherent in Tornado Project, a concept of composers
Ricardo Climent and Paul Wilson, comes from the fact that all six pieces on
Ravello’s new CD use the same basic sonic building blocks (flute, clarinet, and
computer-generated sounds) and flow from the same foundational notion of winds
and wood flying through the air. One of the keys in most of this music is that
the instruments play against their inherent natures rather than in line with
them: the clarinet, in particular, is a richly textured instrument with a
particularly sonorous chalumeau lower
region and a sometimes-uncanny ability to imitate the human voice – but in
these works, it is generally thin, shrill, and given pointed (even pointillist)
notes rather than the lyrical legato
to which it more naturally gravitates. Using the computer to create the
impression of chaos and color, all six composers here seem primarily interested
in producing the same set of moods: now turbulent (like a windstorm), now
ethereal (like a gentle breeze), now static, now eerie. The pieces sound
different, to be sure, but not in any way distinctive enough for listeners
uninvolved in the Tornado Project itself to choose one or more that stand apart
from, much less above, the others. Perhaps this is just the sort of collaborative
effort that Climent (who contributes Russian
Disco) and Wilson (Beneath the
Surface) intend. The other works here, all handled skillfully by Elizabeth
McNutt and Esther Lamneck, are Robert Rowe’s Primary Colors, Andrew May’s Still
Angry, Eric Lyon’s Trio for flute,
clarinet, and computer, and Russell Pinkston’s e++. The Rowe and Pinkston pieces date to 2009, the other works to
2007, but all certainly fit within the Tornado Project concept. Listeners
familiar with it will have a far greater sense of participating in this CD
through listening to it than will ones who simply come to the disc, as it were,
cold.
There is, in fact, a
coldness to a great deal of contemporary music, as there was to the
self-proclaimed electronic music of the mid-20th century and,
indeed, to at least some twelvetone and aggressively atonal music dating back
considerably further in time. This may be one reason that the overt, even
overdone warmth of much film music proves irresistibly attractive not only to
many listeners but also to many performers. The opening-night concert of the
2014/15 season of the Los Angeles Philharmonic was testimony to this
attraction, offering an hour and a half of the decidedly tonal and very
definitely warmly effusive music of John Williams. Yes, there is variety here,
but it is the variety of the topics of the films for which Williams has
written, not any significant variety in the orchestrations or the basic
handling of melodic (very melodic)
material in an entirely tonal universe. The new C Major DVD of this concert,
which features enthusiastic playing by the orchestra under the
always-enthusiastic Gustavo Dudamel and includes Itzhak Perlman making another
of his many upbeat appearances, is a treat for fans of Schindler’s List, Fiddler on the Roof, Catch Me if You Can, Amistad
and, emphatically, Star Wars. There
is also a cleverly constructed occasional piece here called Soundings, in which Williams writes a
work for the Walt Disney Concert Hall where this concert took place – and
specifically designs some of the music to reverberate in a way that makes the
hall itself seem to be a participant in the performance (which, in truth, every
venue is, although normally not this explicitly). There is something facile
about Williams’ music (and, as well, about some of Perlman’s playing and
Dudamel’s conducting here) – yes, there is occasional depth to what Williams
writes, but this music is mostly surface-level flash whose gestures are clever
and calculated rather than motivated by any particularly deep impulse. Indeed,
in a sense, all these works are
occasional music, the occasions being the movies for which Williams created
most of the pieces heard here. The familiar tunes will certainly be enjoyable
for the films’ fans, and even the unfamiliar Soundings will lie comfortably in the ears of those who have not
previously heard it. There is never anything challenging in Williams’ music,
nor is there meant to be: it serves a specific purpose, and serves it well. The
interviews offered on the DVD with Williams, Dudamel and Perlman tend to give
the material more gravitas than it really deserves, but that is somewhat
forgivable in the course of what is, after all, a “tribute” concert. Best to
take neither the words nor the music itself too seriously.
In the same way, the professed emotions of
most folk music are not to be taken too seriously, even when delivered in
exaggerated form (perhaps especially then). The 15 offerings on a new release
from Big Round Records provide evidence of this. There is certainly a striving
for variety here: although most tracks are songs sung by baritone Mel Braun,
with fine piano accompaniment by Laura Loewen and interesting periodic
interjections by Fred Redekop, Jay Taylor and Greg Gardner, there are some
instrumentals to break things up (The
Agony of the Dance, for instance, and Meet
Big and Dinky, that being the name under which Redekop and Taylor perform
on mandolin and bass), and some unexpected arrangements (Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie for soloist and chorus). Most
listeners will likely be highly familiar only with Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie and Red River Valley: the remaining music contains some surprises. The
intended setting of the disc is not the Red River Valley of Texas but that of
Manitoba, Canada; as a result, the folk music presented, although some of it
dovetails with U.S. “cowboy culture,” also includes material that is French
Canadian, German Mennonite, Scots, and drawn from the aboriginal Métis people. The emotional compass of
the works is not especially wide or deep, but these pieces certainly do draw,
at least in a superficial way, on the things that make people human no matter
where they live: love, sacrifice, exile, determination, and (perhaps above all)
humor. Nine of the 15 tracks come from traditional sources, but whether the
music has been around for centuries or was composed recently, it all sounds
simple, straightforward, tuneful and easy to hear – lacking any particular profundity,
perhaps, but all the more pleasing for not claiming to possess any. One notably
successful Scotsman, Andrew Carnegie, once said, “There is little success where
there is little laughter,” and certainly this CD cannot be said to lack that
particular element of accomplishment.
And how, then, does one seek
variety and success in a 20-track release focused entirely on the same subject,
Christmas, and sung a cappella
throughout? Ragnar Bohlin, who founded Capella SF in 2014 and directs it on its
new Delos recording, comes up with an intriguing approach by mixing not only
languages (as on By the Red) but also
musical time periods, works familiar and unfamiliar, and the secular with the
sacred. To the pieces by notable composers (Praetorius’ Psallite unigenito, Britten’s Balulalow
and This little babe) are added traditional
sacred and worldly songs and even a spiritual (Go Tell It on the Mountain in Bohlin’s own arrangement). Silent Night is juxtaposed with Ding, dong! Merrily on high, and a CD
that opens with Veni, veni, Emmanuel (also
in a Bohlin arrangement) concludes 57 minutes later with Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas. There is even a piece
composed especially for this choir and receiving its world première recording: Fredrik Sixten’s There is no rose (which, perhaps not
coincidentally, is the longest work on the disc). The singing is uniformly
smooth, elegant and beautifully blended, whether the choir is holding forth in
Latin or English, in centuries-old music or contemporary works. Although quite
clearly a winter-season disc, this CD’s release in summer shows Bohlin’s
determination to make Cappella SF a choir for all seasons – a clichéd notion
that has more-than-usual applicability here. It is true that even when music is
sung this well and varied as much as possible within its context, some listeners
will find that the sameness of the choir’s overall sound wears on the ears a
bit or blends into the background – although that can be a reason to enjoy the
disc on several hearings rather than straight through. Christmas music itself
is not universally appealing, nor is a
cappella singing, so Light of Gold
is by definition intended for some listeners and not for others. Yet it will
certainly bring joy, if not to the world, then to quite a few music lovers
within it.
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