Of Love of You: A Tribute to
Emery W. Harper. Sharon Harris, soprano; Robert Osborne, bass-baritone;
Todd Crow, Lowell Liebermann and Yehudi Wyner, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Jane O’Leary: The Passing Sound
of Forever and other chamber music. Navona. $14.99.
Hans Bakker and Peter Greve:
Lines to Infinity. Navona. $14.99.
Georges Raillard: Butterflies in
the Labyrinth of Silence. David William Ross, guitar. Navona. $14.99.
Contemporary composers
frequently try to make their points as much through words as through music. And
some compositions, although they can stand on their own, have their
individuality subsumed under the umbrella of a larger purpose – often, as is
the case with Of Love of You, a very
insular and inward-directed purpose, whose full meaning will be apparent only
to those who are musical intimates of the composers. Very, very few listeners
outside the inner circle of Luigi
Terruso and Emery W. Harper will get the full effect of the works on a new MSR
Classics release; and that is by intent, since Terruso, who lived with Harper
for more than 20 years, conceived of this project as a tribute to Harper, who
died in 2009, and had the component parts created by composers who were friends
of the two men during their two decades together. There are 11 composers
represented here, some of them quite prominent among followers of modern
classical music: William Bolcom, Joan Morris, David Del Tredici, Steven
Stucky, Lowell Liebermann, Bernard Rands, John Eaton, Paul Moravec, Yehudi
Wyner, Tania León and Jorge
Martín. The works on the CD,
all world première recordings, include
three for piano solo (Rands’ Impromptu
No. 2, Del Tredici’s Bank Street
Prelude, and Wyner’s Amoroso) and
one for piano four hands (Bolcom’s piquant Sentimental
Waltz, a highlight of the disc). The remaining seven pieces are songs, some
of which use thoroughly unsurprising words (Emily Dickinson’s in Moravec’s You Left Me, John Milton’s in Eaton’s Lycidas, Percy Shelley’s in Liebermann’s
Music, When Soft Voices Die) and some
of which go a bit further afield in terms of familiarity (Carlos Pintado’s in
León’s Mi Amor Es, and Arnold Weinstein’s in the title track, set by
Morris and Bolcom). And there are two songs using words by Walt Whitman: We Two Boys by Martín and Out of the Cradle, Endlessly Rocking by Stucky. Does this mean that
Terruso and/or Harper had a particular fondness for Whitman? Does the balance
of vocal and instrumental music signify anything? The titles aimed at
expressing love are obvious elements of a project such as this, but is there
special significance to a place such as “Bank Street”? These and other
questions are ones to which the contributors to this project surely know the
answers – and for that closely connected group, those answers surely have
significance. And a few of the pieces here reach out for meaningfulness beyond
their occasional purpose. But really, this is an “in” project for a designated
“in-group,” and it is not a musical paean, eulogy or celebration for anyone not
already part of those “in the know.” If you were not among the close friends of
attorney Emery W. Harper (1936-2009), the works here will have only minimal
significance and, in the main, little to communicate beyond the conventional.
The Navona CD called The Passing Sound of Forever would seem,
on the basis of its title, to be another encomium for someone or something.
Here, though, the title track, which dates to 2015, refers to a specific piece
for string quartet, inspired by a Beethoven quartet and expressing, in all
three of its movements, a sense of striving or yearning, communicated
effectively by the ConTempo Quartet (Bogdan Sofei and Ingrid Nicola,
violins; Andreea Banciu, viola; Adrian Mantu, cello). The rest of the
music here is simply a sampling of Jane O’Leary’s style in chamber works for
various instruments. A Way Through
(2013) is for alto flute (Madeleine Staunton), bass clarinet (Paul Roe), and
accordion (Dermot Dunne), a particularly intriguing instrumental combination
that makes possible some unusual sounds and contrasts – which O’Leary explores
with skill. There is also rather unusual, and interesting, sound from concert
harp (Andreja Malir) and cello (Martin Johnson) in a work from 2011 called
(with ellipses) …From Hand to Hand… The
remaining pieces here are more ordinary. They are No. 19 (2012) for violin solo (Elaine Clark); Murmurs and Echoes (2015) for clarinet (Paul Roe) and piano (David
Bremner); and A Winter Sketchbook
(2015) for alto flute (Staunton) and violin (Clark). O’Leary seems especially
interested in the emotional coloration of varying instrumental sounds – she is
fond of harmonics, for example – and likes to blend instruments at some times
while contrasting them strongly at other times. She also enjoys creating, from
time to time, a sense of spatial distance or distortion, as in the final
movement of Murmurs and Echoes. All
these works have effective moments; those using atypical instrumental
combinations are the most engaging.
The evocative title of another
new Navona chamber-music CD, Lines to
Infinity, turns out not to refer to any specific piece by Hans Bakker or
Peter Greve: instead, it is supposed to reflect the overall feeling of all five
works on the disc, acting as a sort of guidepost for listeners looking to
explore the intended emotional landscape of the recording. It does help to have
some sort of guide here, because the pieces themselves are not particularly
closely related to each other. True, four of the five use flute, but one does
not include it and one (Bakker’s Leys/Krachtlijnen)
is for a solo flute (played by Cora Greevenbosch). There are three works here
by Bakker, the other two being Easy Piece
– Petite Pièce for cello (Ludmila Bubeníčková) and piano (Lucie Kaucká),
and Trio for Flute, Oboe and Clarinet
(respectively, Markéta Soldánová, Gabriela Kummerová, and Aleš Janeček). The
two pieces by Greve are Sonata for Flute
and Piano (Petr Hladík and Kaucká) and “Dialogues”
for Flute, Cello and Piano (Soldánová, Petr Nouzovský and Kaucká). Both the
Greve works are representational to some extent, the sonata being primarily
modal in construction and strongly influenced by Turkish folk music, and the
trio being intended to represent four elements of communication between lovers:
“Discussion,” “Dispute,” “Reflection” and “Celebration” – although the finale
returns at last to the tempo of the first movement, suggesting a certain
repetitive circularity of interplay. Of the three Bakker works, Leys/Krachtlijnen is built around a
hymnlike melody, Easy Piece is indeed
simple-sounding and rather like film music, and the trio – the most substantial
of these three pieces – is structurally and rhythmically complex, giving each
instrument a chance to stand out from the others. Whether these five disparate
chamber works add up, collectively or in some combination, to Lines to Infinity, is scarcely obvious
and, in truth, not especially relevant.
Yet another evocatively
titled Navona release, Butterflies in the
Labyrinth of Silence, actually draws its name from two of the dozen
solo-guitar pieces by Georges Raillard heard on the disc. One is called Butterfly and the other The Labyrinth of Silence. The two works
exist together only in the CD’s title – they are not even juxtaposed on the
recording. But in this case, the overall disc title, if not taken too literally, does give a fair
summation of the moods of the works, from delicate to quiet. There is little of
the dramatic here, although He Burst Out
Laughing does start with a burst of what could be laughter before it subsides into serenity. These works’
titles are rather good reflections of their sound: in addition to those already
mentioned, they include Shells on the
Beach, Night Waves, Pacemaker, To Pilar, Summer Evening at the Rhine, Three
Child’s Plays for Selina, Dance of the Shadows, Measuring Clouds, and Patio. Raillard does a good job of
balancing consonance and dissonance in his guitar writing, and David William
Ross skillfully evokes the many capabilities of the instrument even as he
brings forth the various emotions that Raillard wants to communicate. For all
its multiplicity of approaches to guitar composition, though, Raillard’s music
ultimately has a certain sameness of sound that makes an hour and a quarter of
it less than fully appealing – after a while, the works tend to recede into the
background, although listeners whose attention starts to drift will likely find
themselves brought back to attentiveness from time to time by one unusual or
striking compositional element or another. These may take the form of
unexpected dissonances, for example, or rapping on the guitar’s body for a
percussive effect. On the whole, this is an inward-focused CD that will be of
particular interest to guitar players – for others, it is on the monochromatic
side, although the music is certainly well-suited to the instrument and the
performances are well and sensitively done.