Beethoven: Piano Sonata No. 2; An
die ferne Geliebte (transcribed by Liszt); Czerny: Erste fantasie auf motive
aus Beethovens werken; Nocturne in E-flat; Mendelssohn: Variations Sérieuses.
Gwendolyn Mok, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Kate Moore: Stories for Ocean
Shells. Ashley Bathgate, cello. Cantaloupe Music. $15.
Copland: Sonata for Violin and
Piano; Two Pieces for Violin and Piano; Korngold: Much Ado about Nothing—Suite
from the Incidental Music; Marietta’s Lied and Tanzlied from “Die Tote Stadt.”
Yuriy Bekker, violin; Andrew Armstrong, piano. Navona. $14.99.
Scene Rustique: Twentieth-Century
Oboe Works by Hedwige Chrétien, Mary Chandler, Marina
Dranishnikova, Gloria Wilson Swisher, and Madeline Dring. Leslie Odom,
oboe; Soomee Yoon, piano. Navona. $14.99.
Steven Winteregg: Journeymen’s
Songs. Navona. $14.99.
It is a particularly
salutary experience to hear composers’ music on the instruments for which they
wrote it – not only music of the Baroque era, which is where “historically
informed” performances began, but also music of much later times, right into
the 20th century, when gut strings remained the norm and there was
much more portamento than is now
customary. And when a performer is as good as pianist Gwendolyn Mok on a new
MSR Classics release, there is pleasure both from the readings themselves and
from the context in which they are presented. Mok’s disc is called “The Spirit
of Beethoven,” and for once, this is an “overview” title that actually fits the
music and does not feel forced. Mok first offers a very early Beethoven piano
sonata, played on a 1985 reproduction of a 1795 Louis Dulcken fortepiano, and
Mok’s rendition shows quite clearly how deeply rooted Beethoven was in the
Classical era before beginning to move music into new directions. The fortepiano
itself – decidedly worth hearing in, among other music, all the Beethoven piano
concertos – has a sound quite different from that of a modern concert grand, as
well as a much smaller compass of notes. Beethoven used it to its fullest
extent, but that is nowhere near what modern pianos can bring to bear – and
this music sounds all the better, all the more realistic in a strange time-traveling way, when performed on the
sort of instrument for which Beethoven wrote it. This is equally true for
Liszt’s transcription of the song cycle, An
die ferne Geliebte, played here on an 1823 Broadwood & Sons instrument
that by that time was called a pianoforte rather than a fortepiano. Liszt
himself used even-more-substantial instruments than this one, but the Broadwood
& Sons sound has clear transitional elements to it, being fuller than that
of earlier fortepianos but without the scope or resonance of instruments that
were yet to come. Mok uses the same pianoforte for Beethoven pupil Carl
Czerny’s Erste fantasie auf motive aus
Beethovens werken, a rather slight work that nevertheless deserves to be
better known for its pleasantries as well as its effective use of Beethoven’s
thematic material as its basis. Mok then moves to a third instrument for
another Czerny work, Nocturne in E-flat,
Op. 547 (Czerny was amazingly prolific). Switching to an 1868 Érard for this piece is a
particularly happy decision, even though this pianoforte was built 11 years
after Czerny’s death. The reason this works so well is that it gives listeners
a chance to hear the music of this close Beethoven associate on two very
different-sounding instruments, thus emphasizing both the transitional nature
of Czerny’s own works and the influence Beethoven had over succeeding
generations. The CD concludes, still on the Érard, with Mendelssohn’s Variations
Sérieuses, Op. 54, a work with a more-tenuous connection to
Beethoven than Czerny’s variations, but one showing quite clearly how
Mendelssohn, like other composers of Beethoven’s time and immediately
thereafter, adapted elements of Beethoven’s pianistic thinking and made it
their own. Mendelssohn was 18 when Beethoven died and had already produced a
considerable body of work, much of it influenced more by Haydn and Mozart than
by Beethoven – but these variations show him reaching for greater intensity in
the Beethoven mode, while filtering
Beethoven’s influence through his own, already well-developed piano
style.
The Cantaloupe Music CD of
music by Kate Moore is as determinedly up-to-date as Mok’s is decidedly focused
on Beethoven’s time. Here the solo instrument is the cello, with Ashley
Bathgate performing an hour-long, six-piece sequence that composer Kate Moore
calls Stories for Ocean Shells.
Written over a 20-year period, the individual elements sometimes have the cello
playing alone and in relatively straightforward mode, sometimes stretch the
instrument in fairly typical contemporary ways, and sometimes combine the
cello’s warm and rich sound with electronic elements that are intended to
supplement the instrument but have a tendency to detract from its tonal beauty.
For example, the work’s overall title is taken from its second, eponymous
element, in which the cello line climbs above thick and rather eerie-sounding
electronics that aurally get in the way of Bathgate’s impassioned playing. The
pieces within Stories for Ocean Shells
are of varying interest as well as varying structure: “Velvet,” for instance,
is a moderately effective mixture of cello with electronic sounds, while
“Homage to My Boots” is less interesting – and requires an audience to know
that the work connects with Moore’s travels for it to have any significant
connection with listeners. This is a (+++) CD featuring some fine cello playing
and some good writing for the instrument: Moore herself plays the cello. The
musical material, however, is on the thin side and is often rather ordinary in
its insistence on mixing elements that do not go together particularly well.
Aaron Copland and Erich
Wolfgang Korngold, on the other hand, came up with well-joined elements of
various sorts in their music for violin and piano, with the works on a new
(++++) Navona CD played with verve and style by Yuriy Bekker and Andrew
Armstrong. These pieces are rarely performed, and the violin used by Bekker is
rarer still: it is a 1656 Stradivarius (called the “ex-Nachez”) that has not
been recorded before. The violin’s wonderful tone is scarcely a surprise, given
its provenance, but the contrasts built into the music are enough to make
listeners sit up and take notice. Copland’s Two
Pieces for Violin and Piano, for instance, dates to 1926 and is redolent of
the influences that make earlier Copland music so attractive: folk tunes, blues
and jazz. The pieces themselves offer a strong contrast between the Nocturne and the Ukulele Serenade. But both are tonal and pleasant to hear, which
gives them a strong contrast with the Sonata
for Violin and Piano of 1943. This work seems almost to play against the wonderful tone of the
Stradivarius, much as Moore’s music at times seems at war with the cello’s
warmth. And Copland’s piano part here is decidedly modern and
technique-oriented, making extended use of parallel chords made of stacked
perfect fourths – creating a foundation for the three movements that is quite
different from what most listeners associate with Copland’s more-popular works
(and perhaps explaining this sonata’s comparative obscurity). Copland’s music
is paired interestingly with works by Korngold that are even earlier than
Copland’s Two Pieces. The suite from Much Ado about Nothing dates to 1921 and
offers four attractively structured, if rather straightforward, excerpts from Korngold’s
incidental music to Shakespeare’s play. Here the violin and piano merge and
discuss as frequently as they take on the roles of dominant and subsidiary
instrument – although when they do assume those roles, the violin is clearly in
charge. There are also two transcriptions here of songs from Korngold’s 1920
opera, Die tote Stadt, and they offer
attractive and often-warm moments in which the violin sings as a substitute for
the missing human voice. The CD is intriguing both for its repertoire and for
the sound of the violin, and the playing by Bekker and Armstrong is very fine
throughout.
Twentieth-century duos of a
different sort are presented on a Ravello release called Scene Rustique and featuring Leslie Odom and Soomee Yoon. Here too
there are some interesting pieces, all of them written by woman composers and
all of them receiving world première
recordings. The works vary considerably in style and mood. Hedwige Chrétien’s Scene Rustique, which gives the disc its title, is a series of
variations on a pastoral, four-note theme with a slight Mozartean flavor – the
composer has a penchant for ornamentation and uses it to dress the theme up in
a variety of ways. Mary Chandler’s Three Dance
Studies for Oboe and Piano offers a trio of very short movements (the
concluding Magyar lasts barely half a
minute) with clear rhythms. Marina Dranishnikova’s Poème contains many neo-Romantic elements, such as strong
emotional expression and frequent metrical changes, that bely its date of 1953
– it is intended to express the feelings of a tragic love affair, which it does
through a generally dark mood and disturbed-sounding syncopated sections.
Gloria Wilson Swisher’s Salutations
is lighter music, along the lines of Chandler’s work, with three brief
movements giving the oboe more chances than usual to offer proclamations and
even, per the title of the second movement, Fanfares.
The CD concludes with two works by Madeleine Dring, Danza Gaya and Italian Dance,
which are both fairly straightforward dance tunes that invite the oboe to
bubble along above pleasant piano accompaniment. This (+++) CD will be of interest to oboists
looking to extend their repertoire and to listeners who fancy a chance to hear less-known
20th-century oboe music, but even those who really enjoy the rather
slight works and the very fine playing will likely be disappointed to find that
the disc lasts only 30 minutes – a genuinely paltry length for a full-priced
CD.
At 54 minutes, the new
Navona CD of music by Steven Winteregg is more reasonable in duration; and this
disc too seems directed in large part at instrumentalists who want to expand
their repertoire. In this case, however, non-performers will also find much to
enjoy. The CD features trumpeter Daniel Zehringer on B-flat and C trumpets and
flugelhorn, and the works call for instrumental forces ranging from solo C
trumpet (African Fanfare) to solos on
all three instruments (the five-movement Reflections
of Quoheleth) to C trumpet and piano (The
City, with pianist Steve Aldredge) and flugelhorn and cello (Two Souvenirs, the cello here played by
Franklin Cox). The album title does not come from any specific work but from
the overall notion of travel both geographic (with references to places ranging
from Chicago to several Chinese cities) and musical (through use of the various
trumpets and different accompanying forces). The geographical references of African Fanfare and the two movements of
Two Souvenirs (first Postcard from Narbonne, then Train to Nowhere) are at least
reasonably clear from the titles, and The
City is supposed to be a musical reflection on Chicago. The name Quoheleth
sounds like something out of H.P. Lovecraft but is actually biblical (the
reference is to Ecclesiastes); this is the piece on the CD that most clearly
shows the differing colors of which trumpets of various types are capable,
making it especially intriguing for performers. There are also two works here
with more-extensive accompaniment. One is China
Crossing, whose four movements are Beijing,
Hangzhou, Shanghai and Hong Kong;
here the writing is for a brass quintet including Zehringer and Eric Knorr,
trumpets; Jonas Thomas, horn; Gretchen McNamara, trombone; and Thomas Lukowicz,
tuba. The referents to the specific cities are not particular evident, but the
ensemble writing is attractive and the four movements are short enough not to
wear out their welcome. Finally there is the intriguing, if somewhat overly cute,
Popular Variations on a Classical Theme,
in which Zehringer plays C trumpet and flugelhorn and is accompanied by Jerry
Nobel on percussion and Don Compton on bass. The six movements are built around
the well-known theme from the Largo
of Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9,
“From the New World,” and the idea is to compare and contrast that theme with
ones from specific later decades: the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. The
idea is fun, and hearing Dvořák
varied in multiple tempos and juxtaposed with Benny Goodman’s Sing, Sing, Sing, the Marcels’ Blue Moon, TV’s Green Acres, the Village People’s Macho Man, and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Phantom of the Opera is just outlandish enough to be intriguing.
But the piece is essentially a “one-trick pony,” and even though none of the
movements is very long (the six combined last 13 minutes), what Winteregg is
doing is obvious enough so it wears rather thin after a while. Still, as a
whole, listeners, especially but not only trombonists, will consider this a
(++++) CD for its cleverness, the number of ways Winteregg finds to use the
lead instruments, and the first-rate playing of Zehringer in every one of these
pieces.
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