Sibelius: Jedermann; Two Serious
Melodies; In memoriam. Pia Pajala, soprano; Tuomas Katajala, tenor;
Nicholas Söderlund, bass;
Cathedralis Aboensis Choir; Mikaela Palmu, violin; Turku Philharmonic Orchestra
conducted by Leif Segerstam. Naxos. $12.99.
Gordon Getty: A Prayer for My
Daughter; Poor Peter; The Little Match Girl; Joan and the Bells. Nikolai
Schukoff, tenor; Melody Moore, soprano; Lester Lynch, baritone; Chor des
Bayerischen Rundfunks and Münchner
Rundfunkorchester conducted by Asher Fisch and Ulf Schirmer. PentaTone. $19.99
(SACD).
Bruno Mantovani: Cinques poèmes
de János Pilinszky; Vier geistliche Gedichte; Monde évanoui
(Fragments pour Babylone); Cantata No. 4, “Komm, Jesu, Komm.” Accentus Chamber
Choir conducted by Laurence Equilbey and Pieter-Jelle de Boer; Sonia
Wieder-Atherton, cello; Pascal Contet, accordion. Naïve. $16.99.
Christopher Rouse: Seeing; Kabir
Padavali. Talise Trevigne, soprano; Orion Weiss, piano; Albany Symphony
conducted by David Alan Miller. Naxos. $12.99.
David Ashley White: The Blue
Estuaries; Jocelyn Hagen: soft blink of amber light; Christopher Theofanidis:
Messages to Myself; Wayne Oquin: O Magnum Mysterium; Dominick DiOrio: A Dome of
Many-coloured Glass. Houston Chamber Choir conducted by Robert Simpson. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
Sometimes music can be too atmospheric. That is the case with
Sibelius’ Jedermann, incidental music
to a 1916 production of a revision of a medieval morality play. Sibelius
designed the music to parallel the speaking parts precisely, enhancing and
being enhanced by them, much as was done decades later in film music (and
continues to be done in that medium today). The problem is that Jedermann is a very slow-moving slog of
a play, true in its 20th-century incarnation to its very old roots
and, as a result, allowing for only a very small amount of brightness in the
music. Songs and dancelike tunes are acceptable early in the play, as Everyman
indulges in earthly delights, but the point of the play – as of other morality
plays – is that earthly enjoyment brings one to the attention of the Devil, and
must be given up and repented for in order to achieve salvation. So the choral
singing (which is quite fine) and the brief solos from soprano, tenor and bass
are soon dispensed with, and the play drags the music along through multiple
sections marked Largo, Adagio di molto,
Largo e mesto, even Con grande
dolore. The unremitting lugubriousness of the music – which makes it
unsurprising that Sibelius never created a suite from Jedermann, as he did from his other theater music – fits the story
well; but heard independently of the words it was designed to complement and
enhance, it is unconvincing. And the overall bleakness of the CD is unrelieved
by the material accompanying Jedermann:
instead of choosing something contrasting and upbeat for this latest of his
forays into Sibelius’ theater and less-known music, Leif Segerstam adds to the
play’s music the composer’s Two Serious
Melodies (1914-15), depressive violin-and-orchestra pieces reflecting their
wartime creation, and In memoriam
(1910), a distinctly funereal (and rather Mahlerian) offering that was
eventually played at Sibelius’ own funeral in 1957. As in other releases in
this generally very interesting Naxos sequence, the Turku Philharmonic
Orchestra plays very well, and Segerstam leads it with a sure hand and
considerable understanding of the material. But the nearly unrelieved darkness
of this release makes it difficult to recommend it to anyone other than
committed Sibelius fans who are eager to hear as much of his music as possible.
An unrestrained
recommendation is also difficult to give to the new PentaTone SACD of music by
Gordon Getty (born 1934). Getty is a fine composer with sound theatrical
instincts and more than a little skill in vocal writing. But his works are not
of uniform quality and interest, as is clear from the four offered here. Two
use his own texts: Poor Peter and Joan and the Bells, each of which
contains three movements. The former is rather self-consciously art-songy, the
texts delivered against a fairly light orchestration in a kind of singsong Sprechstimme that is not particularly
well-suited to the material. The latter, a cantata about Joan of Arc that is darker,
more operatic and scored for a larger ensemble, is much more effective despite
being somewhat overly melodramatic. The contrast between the opening movement, Judgment, and the second, Joan in Her Chamber, is particularly
pronounced; the final movement, The Square
at Rouen, is the most predictable despite being the climax of the work –
yet its effectiveness as drama cannot be doubted. This work as a whole is almost
a miniature oratorio – and that is also the impression of The Little Match Girl, based on Hans Christian Andersen’s
bittersweet (more bitter than sweet) story, in which the positive elements are
delivered through unswerving belief in highly traditional Christianity (a
frequent theme in Andersen’s tales). Here Getty does not seem quite sure
whether the material is tragic or in some sense uplifting; as a result, the
work has less emotional punch and less of a central core of feeling than does
his setting about Joan of Arc. As for A
Prayer for My Daughter, this uses a complex and controversial poem by William
Butler Yeats as its basis: the poem deals with Irish nationalism (it was
written during the Anglo-Irish War, in 1919), sexuality, expectations of
womanhood in the early 20th century, and more. It calls for a
setting of considerable complexity – or, alternatively, one in which the
composer chooses among the various interpretations of the poem and uses music
to advance the thesis of that particular meaning. Getty’s setting is fine, but
it is rather on the pale side, tending to accept Yeats’ words literally rather
than to interpret them – and not finding any way to reflect on the war scenario
that, along with the birth of Yeats’ daughter, brought the poem into being. As
a result, Getty’s work carries rather less meaning than the poem it sets and
illustrates; but its sensitive orchestration and attentiveness to the words
themselves make it an interesting and, on the whole, effective piece. The
performers here are all quite fine, with the Chor des Bayerischen Rundfunks
outstanding and Ulf Schirmer – who leads Joan
and the Bells – delivering a more-nuanced and more-involving performance
than does Asher Fisch, who conducts the other three works.
The vocal music of Bruno
Mantovani (born 1974) is only part of his life – indeed, composition itself is
only one part. Mantovani is also a conductor, radio music producer, and music
educator and administrator. The Accentus Chamber Choir commissioned Cinques poèmes de János
Pilinszky from Mantovani in 2004 and subsequently commissioned three
additional works from him. All four are now available on a Naïve release that
will be of interest as much to fans of the performing ensemble as to those
interested in Mantovani’s music. In fact, the music itself is nothing special
within its contemporary context. It periodically looks back as far as Bach,
Gesualdo and Rameau, occasionally echoes the Romantic leanings of Schubert and
Schumann, and frequently dips into jazz, Oriental music and other
cross-cultural and cross-musical currents that today’s composers visit with
considerable regularity. Mantovani writes well for voices, but only in a
modern-music context. Cinques poèmes
de János Pilinszky, for example, includes the usual asymmetry of
construction, imprecise or absent consonance, fluid or nonexistent key
structure, and an overall inspiration that Mantovani himself says he drew from
electroacoustical sounds. The result is not particularly poetic and not
especially unified: the five poems sound different from one another, and the
work as a whole is fragmented rather than joined in any significant way
relating either to its content or to its musical building blocks. The sung language
is different and the source is poems by Joseph Freiherr
von Eichendorff, but the impact is much the same in Vier geistliche Gedichte and, indeed, in all four works here. It is
a point of pride with Accentus and Laurence Equilbey to support, encourage,
commission and perform as many new works as possible, and certainly Mantovani’s
pieces are well-crafted and well-suited to the Accentus Chamber Choir’s vocal
capabilities. None of them, however, stands out either stylistically or
communicatively from the large amount of vocal music created by other
contemporary composers.
On the other hand, Kabir Padavali (1998) by Christopher
Rouse (born 1949) does have some distinctiveness about it, consisting as it
does of six settings of works by Kabir, a 15th-century mystic poet
and saint of India. Settings of works written in Hindi are unusual in modern
Western music, and Rouse does a good job of exploring the wider-than-might-be-expected
range of Kabir’s interests. These unsurprisingly include religious issues and
even religious ecstasy, but more unusually convey hints of humor and even
puckishness. Kabir Padavali (which
translates as “Kabir Songbook”) is a bit much to hear – it lasts more than half
an hour – but the fact that Naxos supplies transliterations and translations of
the texts makes the music more accessible than it would otherwise be. And Rouse
manages to integrate Western and Eastern elements in his composition in ways
that are effective more often than not. Strong performances by soprano Talise
Trevigne and the Albany Symphony under David Alan Miller give this work as good
a chance of coming across successfully as it is likely to have. And unlike the
rather monochromatic Sibelius CD, this one pairs the vocal material with
something quite different, although written in the same year. Seeing, for piano (the very fine Orion
Weiss) and orchestra, is a kind of piano non-concerto, juxtaposing and
contrasting elements of Schumann with ones from Moby Grape co-founder and guitarist Skip Spence (1946-1999). Very
little connects the music of Schumann and Spence, but what does connect them is
mental illness (exacerbated in Spence’s case by drug addiction and alcoholism),
and Rouse uses this point of contact as the basis of the exploration he
attempts in Seeing. This is an
ambitious and unusual idea and not, in the final analysis, a particularly
successful one: yes, the work shifts abruptly from consonance to dissonance,
and yes, it is disorienting in a way that may perhaps reflect mental imbalance,
but it makes its points several times in different ways and, at a length of
more than half an hour, comes to seem rather self-indulgent. However, it has
numerous interesting moments within its time span, and its concept is
intriguing even if the execution is imperfect. Rouse has some unusual ideas
about how to structure his works, and unlike many contemporary composers, seems
genuinely concerned about connecting with listeners on an emotional level –
something he does inconsistently, but an attempt for which he deserves praise.
There is a certain amount of
reaching out from the five composers on a new MSR Classics vocal release, too.
David Ashley White (born 1944), Jocelyn Hagen (born 1980), Christopher
Theofanidis (born 1967), Wayne Oquin (born 1977), and Dominick DiOrio (born
1984) are from different generations, but all are intrigued by the communicative
power of the chamber choir – and the Houston Chamber Choir under Robert Simpson
is a very fine one. Theofanidis’ Messages
to Myself (2007) is especially effective in this regard, since in searching
for poetry that he himself finds meaningful, the composer comes up with some
that reaches out to the audience as well. Yeats, who appealed to Getty, appeals
to Theofanidis as well, the work here (the fourth and final one of these
“messages”) being an excerpt from When
You Are Old. The first three “messages” are from Walt Whitman (from Leaves of Grass), the medieval Persian
mystic Jellaludin Rūmi, and
(least effectively in terms of involving a wider audience) a personal friend of
Theofanidis named Amy Kirsten. There are two other multi-movement pieces here:
White’s The Blue Estuaries (1998),
using five poems by Louise Bogan, and DiOrio’s A Dome of Many-coloured Glass (2010),
which draws on four poems by Amy Lowell. Interspersed with the
multi-sectional pieces are two single-movement ones. Hagen’s soft blink of amber light (2014), with
the whole title unnecessarily in small letters, includes poetry by Julia
Klatt Singer and complements the choir with flute, clarinet, piano, and
marimba, lending the work a more varied sound palette than the a cappella pieces on this disc possess.
Oquin’s O Magnum Mysterium (2013),
the shortest piece on the CD, is in some ways the most deeply communicative of
all, using contemporary techniques – but not in any overdone way – to set the
classic sacred text for mixed choir, thus producing a joining of today’s
musicianship with that of centuries past. All the performances here are
first-rate, and although the music will have different meanings, and different
levels of meaning, for different listeners, all of it is distinguished by the
composers’ clear interest in sharing their emotional responses to texts with a
receptive audience – a form of sharing that unfortunately is not always evident
in vocal (or, for that matter, instrumental) works by contemporary composers.
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