Prokofiev: Sinfonia Concertante;
Cello Sonata. Zuill Bailey, cello; North Carolina Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Grant Llewellyn; Natasha Paremski, piano. Steinway & Sons.
$17.99.
Janáček: Sonata for Violin
and Piano; Stravinsky: Duo Concertante for Violin and Piano; Prokofiev: Five
Melodies for Violin and Piano; Ravel: Sonata No. 2 for Violin and Piano.
Sarita Kwok, violin; Wei-Yi Yang, piano. Genuin. $18.99.
James B. Maxwell: Serere for
Cello and Harp; Serere for Cello, Harp and Electroacoustics; Nico Muhly: Clear
Music for Cello, Harp and Celeste. Couloir (Ariel Barnes, cello; Heidi
Krutzen, harp). Ravello. $9.99.
Carl Vollrath: Concertos Nos. 1-3
for Piano and Orchestra. Karolina Rojahn, piano; Moravian Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by Petr Vronský.
Navona. $14.99.
Vincent Persichetti: Songs.
Lee Velta, baritone; Sherry Overholt, soprano; Joshua Pierce, piano. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
The rich, warm and elegant
tone of Zuill Bailey’s 1693 Matteo Gofriller cello is the primary attraction of
a new Steinway & Sons recording of major Prokofiev forays into cello
composing. The shadow of Mstislav Rostropovich looms large over these works and
over any cellist who undertakes them: both the Sinfonia Concertante and the
Cello Sonata were created with Rostropovich in mind. Rostropovich had a
grand, warm and all-encompassing technique of a very Russian type, and he was
prone to large gestures, extended bowing and intense emotional identification
with the music he played. Bailey is more reserved, his tone more moderated, his
approach to the music somewhat cooler, more cerebral than emotionally intense.
Rostropovich sometimes had a tendency to wallow; Bailey will have none of that.
In the Sinfonia Concertante, whose
orchestral part is more prominent than it would likely be in a full-fledged
concerto – so that the cello is at times more an obbligato participant than a full-fledged solo – Bailey has no
apparent concern about fading somewhat into the background when the music calls
for him to do so. The result is that when he does come forward, his
participation is all the stronger and more assured. The structure of the Sinfonia Concertante is unusual, with
two Andante movements flanking a
central Allegro giusto nearly as long
as the other movements put together; and despite the very Russian sound of the
music, it is not intended to be heavy-handed or delivered with doom-laden
portentousness. Bailey balances the faster and slower sections expertly and
maintains throughout a fine balance of reserve and emotive intensity.
Unfortunately, the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra under Grant Llewellyn is
less impressive. It is a perfectly fine regional orchestra, but is rather
lacking in the sort of nuance that Bailey possesses in abundance. The accompaniment
is at least workmanlike and at best skilled, but there is little fire in the
performance and little of the warm string sound and elegant brass that give
this music so much of its effect. The result is that when Bailey is not playing
or is not doing so in the forefront, listeners will miss him. The balance of
performers is somewhat better in the Cello
Sonata, where Natasha Paremski gives Bailey his due but also takes the lead
as appropriate, resulting in a performance that generally sounds like a genuine
musical dialogue. This sonata is late Prokofiev and is one of his attempts,
like his Seventh Symphony, to satisfy the Soviet apparatchiks who dictated what was and was not acceptable
“socialist realism” in music. It is a very pleasant work, albeit one without
the bite and sarcasm to which Prokofiev took naturally but that the musical
censors would have found unacceptable. Bailey and Paremski make no attempt to
give the sonata a profundity it does not possess, but they effectively mine it
for its many beauties and produce a warm and satisfying, if occasionally rather
superficial, rendition.
The string instrument is the
higher-pitched violin on a new Genuin CD featuring Australia’s Sarita Kwok and
Taiwanese pianist Wei-Yi Yang, but the Prokofiev on this disc shares some of
the same reserve that the composer’s Cello
Sonata possesses. The Five Melodies
heard here, originally songs without words in Mendelssohnian mode, are on the
cool side, musically a bit distanced and distancing, although they are quite
well played by both performers. Likewise, Stravinsky’s Duo Concertante, the composer’s sole original violin-and-piano
work, withholds any strong emotional connection by design: Stravinsky here
seems deliberately to seek lack of expressiveness, a kind of retreat into
formality and formalism (the “sin” of which his countryman Prokofiev was
accused). The work is pleasant enough and certainly well-made, but ultimately
seems to have little to say. Ravel’s Sonata
No. 2, on the other hand, seems to want to say everything. Opening with a
moody movement and closing with a perpetuum
mobile, the work switches feelings, moods and rhythms nearly constantly,
making it a challenge to perform technically and a difficult piece to bring off
artistically. Kwok and Yang rely on their substantial technical abilities to
communicate the quicksilver changeability of this work, allowing it to flow –
or jump – from element to element, and inviting listeners to follow. The
approach is exhilarating if at times a trifle standoffish and uninvolving. The
real gem of this recording is the Janáček
sonata, a work of intense anger and passion that requires both performers to
dive into its depths and remain there throughout, pulling listeners into a sound
world in which the composer seems to keep trying harder and harder to get
through to listeners – to the point that the music often sounds overwrought.
Musicians who can deal with this work’s intensity without letting it get out of
control produce performances that have a visceral impact on the audience, and
that is just what Kwok and Yang manage here. There is a bluntness to this
music, an insistence that people (performers and hearers alike) pay close
attention to it – it is not an easy work to play or, often, to listen to, but
with a fine reading such as this one, it is well worth the effort to make the
music’s acquaintance.
The second instrument
featured on a new Ravello CD of the music of James B. Maxwell and Nico Muhly is
not the piano but the harp: this is material for the unusual cello-and-harp duo
called Couloir. The target audience here is people who really, really want to
hear Maxwell’s Serere, a 20-minute-plus,
largely static soundscape that is presented twice, once with electroacoustic
elements and once without. This is “music of the spheres” background music
along the lines of innumerable New Age pieces and film scores depicting
infinite cosmic spaces. It is intended in part to deliver the sound of pencil
on paper, because in concept it is a piece about forms of writing, including
handwriting and calligraphy. It is all very abstruse and minimalist and
self-consciously contemporary; it is exactly the sort of modern music that
either expands a listener’s ears or comes across as self-parody, depending on
each individual’s interests and expectations. Between the two lengthy versions
of Maxwell’s work (20 and 26 minutes respectively) is Muhly’s Clear Music, whose point of origin
explains why it has an easier time making at least a basic connection with
listeners who are not automatically enamored of all things new: this is a new
look at something quite old. Muhly chose a single measure from the motet Mater Christi Sanctissima by John
Taverner (1490-1545) as the basis of a 10-minute meditative contemplation using
cello, harp and celeste. Although scarcely tonal, the music dips periodically
into tonality and then exits to realms that are sonically interesting even if
they are of no particular revelatory depth. The Muhly work is nevertheless
significantly more involving than the double dose of Serere, although that does not mean it is sufficient in itself to
encourage most listeners to buy this recording.
If the dual focus of the
Couloir disc may be said to involve cello and harp or, alternatively,
instruments and electroacoustic sounds, that of a new Navona release of the
music of Carl Vollrath is much easier to pin down: the two focuses here are the
piano and the orchestra. But although these three works are labeled piano
concertos and are essentially structured that way, each being in three
movements simply designated Movement I, Movement II and Movement III, the
treatment of the two focuses is non-traditional for works of this type. There
is little flash to the piano part and little intensity to the relationship
between soloist and orchestra. Instead, there is cooperation of almost a
chamber-music sort in the service of vaguely Impressionistic music that
Vollrath intends to use to evoke mild colors: the concertos are titled “Pastel
I,” “Pastel II,” and “Pastel III.” Imprecisely programmatic, the three works
evoke no particular scenes but are instead a series of musical brush strokes in
which pitch, rhythm, harmony and volume are all applied with considerable
gentleness and, often, a vaguely Oriental sound. The influence of folk music
and jazz is also clearly present in some parts of these works, which meander
pleasantly from unspecified scene to unspecified scene; where they eventually
end up is more for listeners to decide than for the composer to determine.
Karolina Rojahn and Petr Vronský make
a particularly good pair for this music, in which soloist and conductor have to
cooperate most of the time and hand off the music only on occasion: there is no
sense here of competition, and while that reduces the concertos’ drama, it
heightens their evocative elements. Like pastel colors, whose softness and
delicacy can be highly pleasant in moderation but may become cloying when
overdone, these concertos offer enjoyable moments within the movements but are blander
and less distinctive when considered as a whole. Listeners will likely find it
more pleasurable to listen to the works one at a time than to hear the whole CD
from start to finish.
The listening situation is somewhat the
same, albeit for different reasons, when it comes to a new MSR Classics release
of 41 songs by Vincent Persichetti (1915-1987). There are 24 songs here for
baritone (Lee Velta) and 17 for soprano (Sherry Overholt), all of them with
accompaniment on the piano (Joshua Pierce, who studied and collaborated with
Persichetti); the two focuses are thus voice and piano. But they are also, in a
more general sense, words and music – and the different ways those two forms of
communication come through to an audience. These songs, all of them world
première recordings, are in 10 groups, written to words from a wide variety of
sources: Carl Sandburg, Sara Teasdale, e.e. cummings, James Joyce, Robert
Frost, Emily Dickinson, Hilaire Belloc and more. Most of the songs are quite
short, with the song cycle A Net of
Fireflies presenting 17 of them in less than 17 minutes. The settings are
also quite varied: Persichetti shows considerable sensitivity to the lyrics and
weaves differing piano lines according to the emotions expressed in the words
and the sounds of the words themselves. As a practical matter, what this means
is that the CD is difficult to listen to straight through, because so many
elements of the music change so often. The song groupings are arranged
chronologically, which is very helpful for following the development of Persichetti’s
style from 1945 (the cummings songs) to 1970 (A Net of Fireflies). However, the arrangement means that Chinese
songs are juxtaposed with English ones, Carl Sandburg’s plain-spokenness with
James Joyce’s abstruse thinking, and so forth. There is something salutary in
all this: hearing words and thoughts in a sequence that would not normally be
one that readers or listeners would encounter stretches the ear and mind in
intriguing ways. But to get the full flavor of the individual groupings and the
songs within them, it is better to listen to the disc a bit at a time than to
try to absorb it all at once. Velta and Overholt both handle the music
skillfully and with careful control and considerable sensitivity, and Pierce’s
pianism is exemplary throughout. Listening to 41 short songs by a
still-underrated 20th-century American composer will not be an
experience that will appeal to all listeners, but those willing to try it will
find many pleasures here.
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