Pierre de Manchicourt: Missa
Reges Terrae; Reges Terrae; Caro Mea; Ne Reminiscaris; Vidi Speciosum; Regina
Caeli. The Choir of St. Luke in the Fields conducted by David Shuler. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
Hilary Tann: Choral Music;
Hildegard von Bingen: O Deus; Rex Noster Promptus Est. Capella Clausura
conducted by Amelia LeClair. Navona. $14.99.
Leonard Lehrman and Joel
Mandelbaum: Harmonize Your Spirit with My Calm. Ravello. $14.99.
Scott Perkins: The Stolen Child;
A Word Out of the Sea; The World of Dream. Audivi conducted by Scott
Perkins. Navona. $14.99.
Sacred choral music of the
16th century is certainly a niche interest, and such music from a
now-little-known composer even more so. Yet there are undiscovered beauties
aplenty in the works of Pierre de Manchicourt on a new MSR Classics CD.
Manchicourt (c. 1510-1564) is yet another of the many composers who, famous in
their own time, soon fell into obscurity after their death – and the music on
this disc helps show why. It is uniformly beautiful – Manchicourt was clearly
highly skilled at vocal writing in the forms of his time (principally masses
and motets). But even though Manchicourt adopted some more-forward-looking
approaches in his later motets, producing smoother melodic lines and frequent
imitative vocal sections, all his music sounds firmly planted within his
lifespan and more old-fashioned than that of such near-contemporaries as Nicolas Gombert. Manchicourt’s innovations
were modest ones, surely sufficient to make his music interesting when it was
composed but not enough to give it staying power thereafter. Nevertheless,
there is extraordinary vocal beauty here, whether in the extended five-movement
Missa Reges Terrae or in the five
shorter works performed with great vocal smoothness and lovely blending by the
Choir of St. Luke in the Fields under David Shuler. This choir is diligent
about following historic performance practices, and the result is a recording
whose lovely flow is evident from start to finish. The voices themselves are
excellently balanced, and Shuler draws attention to the occasional unexpected
elements of Manchicourt’s music – including unexpected dissonances and some
difficult-to-negotiate vocal leaps – without allowing them to dominate what is
essentially music planted firmly in the time in which it was written. This is a
disc for people whose love of Renaissance-era music encompasses less-known as
well as familiar composers, as long as their works sound as warmly convincing
as they do here.
Lyricism and fine formal
balance are also characteristic of the contemporary music of Hilary Tann (born
1947), although of course what she creates is for ears attuned to very sounds
from those of Manchicourt’s time. Yet Tann has a strong sense of the past, and
this is quite explicit on a new Navona recording featuring not only her own
music but also several arrangements of music by Hildegard von Bingen
(1098-1179), one of the earliest female composers whose works have survived.
For example, there is an unusual sequence in the beginning of the first work on
the CD, von Bingen’s O Deus (from her
opera Ordo Virtutum), that Tann
quotes in some form in most of her own works on this disc. Tann is Welsh and
uses several texts by Welsh poets in the music on this CD; she also sets words
written by Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672), the first published female writer from
England’s North American colonies. Tann is given to combinations as well as to straightforward
settings of existing texts: Exultet
Terra, the most interesting work here and the longest by far (its five
movements last more than 40 minutes), includes both biblical verses and poems
by well-known Welsh poet George Herbert (1593-1633). Amelia LeClair leads the
ensemble Capella Clausura with great fervor and intensity in all these works,
both the a cappella pieces and Exultet Terra, which uses double choir
plus English horn, two oboes and two bassoons – with each movement having
different but complementary instrumentation. Tann’s music and LeClair’s
performances are, to be sure, on the rarefied side, but this material has
significant communicative power for listeners interested in modern vocal works
that interpret and reinterpret the religious experiences of long ago and the
spiritual (if not traditionally religious) ones of more-recent times.
The Tann CD is in many ways
a collaborative effort between her and LeClair – and a Ravello disc featuring
works by Leonard Lehrman and Joel Mandelbaum is an even more tightly knit
collaboration. This seems to be a CD celebrating the friendship of Lehrman and
Mandelbaum, intended for their circle of mutual friends rather than for
listeners unfamiliar with their work. Some pieces here are instrumental; some
are vocal. Some use Russian poetry; some use American words. Some music is for
large ensemble (performed by the St. Petersburg State Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Vladimir Lande); some is for a chamber group (Meridian String
Quartet). Some is written by Mandelbaum and performed by Lehrman as pianist (Prelude, Love Is Not All); some is
written by Lehrman and conducted by Mandelbaum (Bloody Kansas); some has Lehrman as both composer and performer (An Elizabeth Gurley Flynn Love Song Cycle).
The pieces themselves are as varied and variegated as the performances,
sometimes using the alternative tunings of which Mandelbaum is fond (although
more often using conventional tunings); sometimes being based on twelvetone
serialism and microtonality; sometimes being serious, sometimes playful;
sometimes emotionally expressive, sometimes reserved and rather cold. It is
very difficult for a listener unacquainted with these composers to get a handle
on what is happening on this disc, which is essentially a miscellany of 23
tracks that switch form, substance and sound repeatedly not only among
themselves but also within individual pieces. Assembled with skill and (in the
vocal pieces) sung with feeling by soprano Helene Williams and bass-baritone
Alexander Mikhalëv, the music
never really gels, never seems to have a particular direction or purpose,
instead progressing hither and thither in a fashion that seems arbitrary even
though it is no doubt clear to Lehrman and Mandelbaum (and perhaps to those who
know them well). Individual items here are evocative and interesting, but the
CD as a whole has an insularity about it that makes it seem more of an “in
crowd” experience than one designed for listeners who are not already part of
the inner circle of these composer/performers.
Like the vocal works of
Lehrman and Mandelbaum, those of Scott Perkins – as heard on a new Navona CD –
are essentially (if not completely) secular rather than sacred in orientation.
But these Perkins choral works tie clearly to older choral music in ways
somewhat similar to those employed by Hilary Tann, although not used as
explicitly. The textures of Perkins’ choral music are clearly contemporary, and
some of his techniques (such as his elaboration of the sound of a single
letter) are quite modern; yet his vocal colors, frequent use of modal language,
and direct expressiveness recall the old a
cappella tradition and do not deviate much from it. The Stolen Child, featuring tenor Tyler Ray and baritone Dan Moore,
is a dark six-movement work using poems by Yeats, Whitman, Auden, and Walter de
la Mare. Its skillful combination of the solo voices with those of the ensemble
Audivi (three each of sopranos, altos, tenors and basses) is especially well
handled by Perkins as conductor: he flawlessly interweaves the choral and solo
sounds to produce a performance of considerable expressiveness. The five
movements of A Word Out of the Sea
are similarly expressive, if not as tightly knit into a focused narrative; here
the ensemble and tenor Tim Keeler engage in complementary tone-painting in
which the final movement, “Whereto Answering, the Sea,” achieves something
approaching serenity, if scarcely finality. The five movements of The World of Dream are strictly choral
and emphatically nocturnal, with the work’s overall impression more
monochromatic than that of the other two pieces here: even brief forays into
lighter, speedier territory soon fall back into a kind of somnolence. The vocal
writing is assured and well-designed throughout all these works, if not
especially distinctive: it is more a blend of multiple styles than a single
style all its own. Perkins nevertheless shows himself a fine vocal craftsman,
sure in his techniques and in devising effective ways of communicating solely
through the human voice. A cappella
music of any time is not to all tastes, but Perkins shows that it can still be
effective in modern (if often backward-looking) guise, reaching out effectively
to those who appreciate the medium.
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