Haydn: Trumpet Concerto in
E-flat—a comprehensive music lesson. Rolf Smedvig, trumpet; Eduard Laurel,
piano. Learning from the Legends DVD. $32.99.
Hummel: Trumpet Concerto—a
comprehensive music lesson. Rolf Smedwig, trumpet; Eduard Laurel, piano.
Learning from the Legends DVD. $32.99.
Erwin Schulhoff: Violin Sonatas
Nos. 1 and 2; Suite for Violin and Piano; Sonata for Solo Violin. Eka
Gogichashvili, violin; Kae Hosoda-Ayer, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Daniel Carr: Music for
Flute—Sonatina for Yumi; Foliage; Song; Sonata; Still; Three Nocturnes; Wedding
Song. François Minaux,
flute; Mayumi Tayake, piano; Megan Gardner, soprano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Reaching out strictly to a
small core audience, two new Learning from the Legends DVDs continue to show
distinctive and highly useful ways in which the DVD medium can be employed for
high-quality instructional purposes. These recordings are, in effect, master
classes for trumpet players with trumpeter Rolf Smedvig. Each offers a complete
performance of an important trumpet concerto – both the concertos as edited by
Smedvig – plus a play-along track of piano accompaniment featuring Edward
Laurel. Smedvig is not only an accomplished trumpet soloist but also a fine
teacher, providing trumpet students with his practice philosophy while actually
showing them the ins and outs of two significant concertos. One of these, the
Hummel, is quite difficult, especially in its final movement, and it is very
helpful to have performance examples from Smedvig’s recording with the Scottish
Chamber Orchestra to supplement the trumpet-and-piano arrangement. The examples
with that orchestra help the Haydn, too, giving students a better sense of
balance than they will get from the piano reduction. Some teaching elements
like the ones here have previously been offered on CD by Naxos and were at one
time available on vinyl from a company called Music Minus One. Naxos’
seven-disc set of “Suzuki Evergreens,” played by Takako Nishizaki, was an
excellent example of a top-notch violinist performing music in an accessible
manner that students could themselves follow and from which they could learn
through repeated listenings. Music Minus One released vinyl LPs containing the
orchestral accompaniments of a variety of works for soloist and orchestra – the
idea being that students would play the solo parts and understand how it would
feel to blend in with and perform in front of an orchestra. However, the two
Smedvig releases, like others in this series, go beyond audio-only offerings by
letting students see just what fingerings Smedvig uses and why. This is one
case in which the DVD format, generally a mixed blessing in classical music,
proves highly useful – and it is supplemented by the availability via download
of both E-flat and B-flat solo trumpet parts with piano accompaniment. Defiantly
limited in appeal despite what looks like a premium price – but really is not,
given the value of the material here – these DVDs offer trumpet students
measure-by-measure information on two staples of their concerto repertoire,
courtesy of a highly knowledgeable soloist who shares not only the basics of
performance but also some tricks of the trade. The audience for these DVDs is
certainly a very limited one, but for that group, the releases hit the target
beautifully: trumpeters will find both DVDs remarkably useful.
There are no play-along elements
on two new MSR Classics CDs, but here too, a large part of the enjoyment comes
simply from hearing how the performers play – how they handle some music that
is likely to be unfamiliar to virtually all listeners. Erwin Schulhoff
(1894-1942) is one of the musicians whose works are being rediscovered today
along with those of others who died at the hands of the Nazis (Schulhoff
perished of tuberculosis in a concentration camp). Schulhoff is a fascinating,
even strange character, and some of his music is fascinatingly strange, too. But
listeners will get little of that from the works played by Eka Gogichashvili
and Kae Hosoda-Ayer, which are among the composer’s more-straightforward ones.
Encouraged in early life by Dvořák,
taught by Debussy and Reger (itself an odd combination), influenced by jazz and
by Communist ideology (his last works were strong affirmations of Socialist
Realism), Schulhoff stated directly that music was a revolutionary art, leading
to “the climb to an ecstatic change for the better” – thus sounding in words
(although never in his later music) somewhat like Scriabin. Frequently given to
self-deprecating humor in his works, fond of dance rhythms and ragtime, almost
always in touch with tonality despite involvement with the Second Viennese
School (from which, however, he never picked up serialism), Schulhoff was most
prolific in the decade of 1923-32, during which he wrote his Sonata for Solo Violin and Sonata No. 2 for Violin and Piano (both
in 1927). Schulhoff was a pianist, not a violinist – he won the Mendelssohn
Prize for piano in 1913 (and for composition five years later). But he writes
well for violin, and both these works, each of them laid out in traditional
four-movement form, show fine command of the violin’s capability and a good
sense of partnering the two performers in a somewhat jazzed-up but essentially conventional
approach to solid musical material. The third movement of the second sonata,
marked Burlesca, is in some ways the
most characteristic of Schulhoff’s temperament, although the Scherzo of the solo sonata has some
interesting elements as well. Before the 1920s, Schulhoff showed a less-
distinctive style, with elements of Debussy and Richard Strauss evident along
with, from time to time, a Scriabinesque touch or two. Suite for Violin and Piano (1911) and Sonata No. 1 for Violin and Piano (1913) are from this earlier
time, with the suite being Schulhoff’s Op. 1. These are solid works,
well-constructed and with interesting touches here and there, including
Schulhoff’s fondness for dance forms in the suite – which more or less follows
Baroque form through its Präludium,
Gavotte and Minuetto, but then
deviates interestingly into Walzer
and, finally, Scherzo. Very little of
the music on this CD, though, is as distinctive as some of Schulhoff’s
more-outlandish pieces: Suite for Chamber
Orchestra includes car horns and slide whistles, Symphonia Germanica satirizes German militarism, Sonata Erotica features a singer’s
extended feigned orgasm, Bassnachtigall has a contrabassoon trying to be soulful and birdlike, and on and on.
Schulhoff was a highly unusual composer whose stranger output is barely hinted
at on this CD, which instead gives the impression of a solid, well-schooled but
ultimately not terribly original creative mind. A touch more bizarrerie would
have been welcome.
As
for Daniel Carr (born 1972), the second MSR Classics volume of his work
features five pieces for flute and piano, one of which also includes a soprano
(the piece is logically entitled Song), and one of which is for flute
solo (Wedding Song, and no, no voice here). François Minaux and Mayumi Tayake do a
fine job with these mostly mild, generally easy-to-listen-to works. Some are
bright (Sonata for Yumi), others
evocative (Foliage, Still, Three
Nocturnes). The four-movement Sonata
is somewhat overextended – Carr’s shorter works come across with greater
effectiveness – but the flute writing is fine throughout, allowing Minaux plenty
of places to breathe and numerous opportunities for expressiveness. The mostly
tonal music has a certain background-ish quality to it: its pleasantries are
clear from the start but tend soon to fade a bit, stopping short of being
totally involving. These are all world première recordings, and it is nice to hear a disc on which a
contemporary composer uses the flute with an understanding of its capabilities
rather than a determination to force the instrument and its player beyond their
respective comfort zones. This is music of no particular consequence – nicely
conceived and nicely made, communicating on a rather superficial level but no
less enjoyable for that. It is, in fact, all the more agreeable because it is
not trying to make the flute sound like anything but a flute: the CD provides a
very satisfying listening experience by inviting listeners to hear nicely
tailored performances of some well-mannered contemporary music – engaging,
convivial and aurally gratifying.
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