Brahms: Sonatas Nos. 1-3 for Violin
and Piano; Scherzo from FAE Sonata. Christian Tetzlaff, violin; Lars Vogt,
piano. Ondine. $16.99.
Hakki Cengiz Eren: Buffavento; Six Studies on Archipenko; Music for
Strings No. 1 (Doors); Four Pieces for Solo Viola. Ravello. $14.99.
New Music for Clarinet: Another Look—works by William O. Smith, Vladimir
Ussachevsky, Adolphus Hailstork, Dana Wilson, F. Gerard Errante and Sydney
Hodkinson. F. Gerard Errante, clarinet, bass clarinet and tenor saxophone;
Nyle Steiner, evi (electronic valve instrument); Lee Jordan-Anders and William
Albright, piano. Ravello. $14.99.
Maya Beiser: TranceClassical.
Maya Beiser, cello. Innova. $14.99.
There are two primary
difficulties with the Brahms Violin Sonatas. One is that, for all the
differences among them that can be explored analytically, they tend to have a
certain sameness of overall sound, and performers do not always do a good job
of differentiating them. The other is that Brahms, being a pianist, gave a lot
of the heft of the sonatas to the piano rather than the violin, which means the
pianist in a performance must be quite restrained, even modest, to avoid
swamping the stringed instrument. These issues are worth mentioning in
connection with the new Ondine recording of the sonatas, featuring Christian
Tetzlaff and Lars Vogt, simply because neither issue is of any real
significance here. These are warm, expressive readings throughout, always
beautiful and very nicely paced: they actually feel somewhat slower than they
are, since Tetzlaff and Vogt emphasize the works’ extended lines and thematic
subtleties – bringing the latter out effectively in the sort of true
partnership that Tetzlaff and Vogt have evolved through longstanding
performance together and that stands them in particularly good stead in these
works. The flow, the lyricism here are beautifully shaped, and while there is
noticeable rubato from time to time,
it never seems out of keeping with the spirit or intent of the music: Tetzlaff
and Vogt approach these sonatas with as much thoughtfulness as virtuosity. The
two recorded these works before, in 2002, and those readings were released as a
live recording, but their performance here is even more assured and beautifully
blended than the earlier one, and the sound quality is significantly better. As
something of an afterthought, Tetzlaff and Vogt offer Brahms’ contribution to
the three-composer FAE Sonata: Albert
Dietrich wrote the first movement, Schumann the second and fourth, and Brahms the
third, the scherzo heard here. The sonata as a whole deserves to be performed
more frequently – it is an occasional piece, but of more than passing interest.
But the scherzo often stands alone when musicians offer a Brahms recital, and
in that case, it can come across as a pleasing trifle and fine encore – which
is how it emerges here.
Brahms actually extended the
scope of violin sonatas in his three works, especially the final one, which is
larger in scale and less intimate than the first two. But whatever Brahms did
for chamber music was done within a clearly delineated Romantic context that
sets his violin sonatas firmly in their time period. These days, contemporary
composers of chamber works seem far more interested in new boundaries for their
music, sometimes stylistic ones and sometimes ones that incorporate multiple
musical approaches. Thus, on a new Ravello CD featuring works by Turkish
composer Hakki Cengiz Eren, the first piece, Buffavento for large chamber ensemble (Thornton Edge conducted by
Donald Crockett) is both highly dissonant (based loosely on earlier works by
Gyorgy Ligeti) and impressionistic (intended as a depiction of castles in
Cyprus). Without knowing the work’s provenance, listeners will simply hear
sounds that could have come from innumerable other works of our era. Six Studies on Archipenko for quartet
(ECCE: Diamanda Dramm, violin; Paolo Vignoroli, flute; Vasko Dukovski, B-flat
and bass clarinet; Virginie Tarrête, harp) has a more interesting sound – the
instruments both complement and contrast with each other to good effect – but
it too depends for full understanding on listeners knowing that it was inspired
by an Alexander Archipenko painting called “La Coquette.” Music for Strings No. 1 is for string quartet (Argus Quartet: Clara
Kim and Jason Issokson, violins; Diana Wade, viola; Joann Whang, cello) and
proceeds by contrasting layered contrapuntal elements, which have a kind of
“horizontal” motion characterized by grace notes, with evenly rhythmic
interjections that provide a sort of “vertical” set of punctuation points. Four Pieces for Solo Viola attempts to
paint four short scenes – “Wandering,” “Scenic,” “Insistent” and “Dialogue” –
by having the performer (Garth Knox) take the instrument through contortions
that sometimes sound dramatic and sometimes merely painful. Like so much
contemporary music, the pieces on this (+++) CD are carefully constructed along
lines chosen and understood by the composer but by no means evident to
listeners – and, indeed, the audience seems almost irrelevant to works that
appear to be intended to show compositional bona
fides but not to communicate anything in particular except to those “in the
know.”
The primary focus of another
(+++) Ravello CD seems to be the performer, clarinetist F. Gerard Errante,
rather than what he performs. The chamber-music works here, originally recorded
on vinyl by Errante some years ago and mostly dedicated to him, are among many
that take instruments (and not only the clarinet) as building blocks for sounds
that work against what the
instruments’ construction and sonic range were intended to be, all in the name
of expanding performers’ (and, theoretically, listeners’) auditory experience.
This is not really a new concept: it dates at least as far back as Charles
Ives’ notion that music should stretch the ears. But Ives always cared about listeners’ ears as well as his own; the
focus is much less certain in the works heard here. Errante’s own piece, Souvenirs de Nice, for example, is a
clarinet improvisation punctuated by prepared piano and including, among other
things, Errante playing two clarinets at the same time. To what end? To
Errante’s, certainly, and theoretically to other performers’, but not
noticeably to an audience’s. Two William O. Smith pieces, Solo for Clarinet with Delay System and Asana, use technology that makes real-time changes in the
clarinet’s sound – a collaboration between composer and performer, certainly,
but with the audience largely left out. Sonic difference is also the main point
of Vladimir Ussachevsky’s Four Studies
for Clarinet and Evi, the latter being essentially a breath-actuated
synthesizer. Adolphus Hailstork’s A
Simple Caprice is more fun than the other pieces here, with a certain
bouncy irreverence to its handling of clarinet and piano; it does, however, go
on much too long (at nearly 15 minutes, it is the longest work on the CD). A
contrast to Hailstork’s outgoing work is the introverted Piece for Clarinet “Alone” by Dana Wilson, which uses a multitude
of techniques, often to good effect. The final piece here, Sydney Hodkinson’s The Dissolution of the Serial, is
actually fun to listen to as clarinet and piano together make fun of multiple
musical genres and styles of composition – including, knowingly or not, some of the ones employed in
all seriousness elsewhere on the disc.
Errante is scarcely the only
contemporary performer whose interest is pushing musical boundaries as far as
possible, even if that means breaking some of them; in fact, especially if that means breaking some.
The same approach is something of a stock-in-trade for cellist Maya Beiser,
whose well-played but vapid (+++) Innova release, TranceClassical, bears a title suggesting that this music is
entrancing (which it is not) and also transclassical
– across and beyond the classical (which it is). Self-indulgent CDs like this
are strictly performer-focused and very much an acquired taste: listeners who
think that Beiser is fascinating/important/intriguing and that a cello altered
and augmented to such an extent that its underlying tonal beauty and range are
largely concealed will delight in the disc; everyone else will wonder what all
the fuss is about and/or simply dislike the whole self-important production. Beiser
can certainly play Bach – she offers a Bach arrangement to open the proceedings
here – but what she wants to play is
music that shows how clever she, as a performer, can be, which is why the other
bookend of the CD is a Beiser arrangement of a piece by Hildegard von Bingen
(1098-1179) that celebrates the divine power of wisdom. The seven works between
those of Bach and von Bingen include three world première recordings and pieces ranging from a Kol Nidre by Mohammed Fairouz to Lou Reed’s Heroin in an arrangement by David Lang that actually includes some
arpeggiation. This is a disc for people who do not especially like the cello
(although the von Bingen arrangement is actually rather affecting) but who very
much like celebrity performances. In a live recital or on DVD, Beiser might
well be mesmerizing to see: getting the variety of sounds that she extracts
from her instrument surely requires circus-worthy contortions and intensity. An
audio recording, though, rises or falls on the basis not only of playing but
also of what is being played. The material here, intended to be variegated, is
really just a hodgepodge connected by Beiser’s interest in it and her skill at
playing arrangements (her own and ones by others). This sort of production can
no longer be considered defiantly different or consciously contemporary – it is
simply one more performer-as-celebrity offering in which the material presented
is mostly thin and the focus is more on the person delivering the musical
message than on the message’s content.
No comments:
Post a Comment