Perspectives. American Brass
Quintet (John D. Rojak, bass trombone; Michael Powell, trombone; Eric Reed,
horn; Louis Hanzlik and Kevin Cobb, trumpets). Summit Records. $14.99.
The Lightning Fields: New Music
for Trumpet and Piano. Jason Bergman, trumpet and flugelhorn; Steven
Harlos, piano and celeste. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Flamethrower: New Music for
Trumpet, Flugelhorn & Interactive Electroacoustics. Stephen Ruppenthal,
trumpet, crotales and flugelhorn. Ravello. $14.99.
Alan Beeler: Sonatas and Soli.
Navona. $14.99.
It is commonplace in
contemporary music to release CDs with “theme” titles rather than ones naming
the composers represented, who may be unknown or at best little-known to
potential audiences. This results in a focus on performers rather than works
performed, and tends to limit the releases to listeners who are either fans of
the specific performers or who are fond of the players’ instruments. This is
certainly the case with a new Summit Records release featuring the American
Brass Quintet – although listeners who do
delve into the CD may well be pleasantly surprised at the quality of the
compositions here, whether or not they have heard music by these composers
before. The opening suite, Shine, by
Robert Paterson (born 1970), offers four movements that can be thought of as
the classical version of heavy metal, at least in their titles: “Ringing Brass
Bells,” “Quicksilver,” “Veins of Gold” and “Bright Blue Steel.” The titles do
not necessarily reflect the music perfectly – for example, “Quicksilver” is not
exceptionally fast, although it is quick enough to serve as a kind of scherzo –
but all four movements show strength in writing for the instruments, and
collectively they present the form of a fairly traditional sonata (opening,
scherzo, slow movement, finale). The American Brass Quintet is an exceptionally
well-balanced group that handles both the individual parts and the ensembles
with real style, keeping the music moving smartly ahead without ever rushing
it, and giving its essentially surface-level communication a fine polish. Quintet for Brass by Jay Greenberg (born
1991) brings out a warmer sound from the ensemble but is a less-impressive
work, prone to stops and starts that make its single movement seem frequently
to drag. Cadence, Fugue, Fade by Sebastian
Currier (born 1959) is more interesting, with an impressive chorale opening that
leads to an unexpectedly lively fugue – which is impressively constructed and
gives the performers quite a workout. The conclusion of the piece is a bit of a
letdown, but it does give the players a chance to show just how quietly and
gently brass can be played. The final piece on the disc is Canticum Honoris Amicorum by Eric Ewazen (born 1954), and it makes
a fine (if rather extended) encore, bright and rhythmic, with themes and
accompaniment that lie well on the instruments and have a pleasantly
old-fashioned celebratory feel. The CD showcases highly impressive playing in
the service of music that mostly repays the obvious care that the American
Brass Quintet lavishes on it.
At least one composer
represented on a new MSR Classics release may be familiar to listeners who
enjoy contemporary music: Michael Daugherty (born 1954) has written in many
forms, and his works are heard more frequently than are those of many other
modern composers. Here he offers The
Lightning Fields, a suite of four movements portraying four locations
associated in one way or another with lightning: “Griffith Observatory (Los
Angeles, California),” “The Lightning Field (Catron County, New Mexico),” “Marfa
Lights (U.S. Route 67, Marfa, Texas),” and “Times Square (New York City).”
Daugherty does a good job of using the trumpet to indicate different ways in
which lightning (and other lights) may strike or appear, although some
repetitiveness both within each piece and in the suite as a whole is
inevitable. Jason Bergman has a formidable technique and handles the whole work
with apparent ease. This is the piece’s world première recording, and the CD contains three other world premières as well: Catalonia (2003) by Richard Peaslee (1930-2016); Sonata for Trumpet and Piano (1994/2013)
by Daniel Schnyder (born 1961); and The
Adventures of… (2016), for unaccompanied trumpet, by Kevin McKee (born
1980). This last is a work for solo trumpet that makes a very fine encore,
putting the instrument and its player through all sorts of demands and
contortions, all of which Bergman handles with aplomb. The other pieces here
include another by McKee, Song for a
Friend (2015), and Sonata for Trumpet
and Piano (2009) by Anthony Plog (born 1947) – who, although not as
well-known as Daugherty, may be familiar to some listeners, and whose work here
shows a strong command of four-movement sonata construction and a good understanding
of the capabilities of the trumpet. Bergman switches to flugelhorn – which he
also plays very adeptly – for two movements of Daugherty’s work and one of
Peaslee’s, the different sound of the instrument helping keep the material
interesting. Steven Harlos provides fine
piano backup throughout, switching to celeste and creating a particularly
unusual sound combination in the third movement of Plog’s sonata. More than
anything, this is a recording for fans of fine trumpet playing, which Bergman
offers throughout.
Stephen Ruppenthal handles
trumpet and flugelhorn very well, too, but Flamethrower,
a new Ravello release, is not really about the instruments’ sound. Nor is it
really about Ruppenthal’s virtuosity, even though the works here were written
for him. Instead, this is by and large a “sonic exploration” disc, for
listeners interested in hearing how acoustic brass instruments come across when
stretched to the limit and juxtaposed with a wide variety of electronically
generated sounds. There is always a certain dated quality to electronic music,
despite the much greater sophistication used nowadays to produce it, because
there is a hard-to-disguise sameness to electronic sounds no matter how
creatively they are made and manipulated. The five pieces on this CD, all of
them world première recordings,
include one without accompanying electronics: Velocity Studies V: NGate (2007) by Allen Strange. This work
certainly shows Ruppenthal’s ability and the strong jazz influences on his
playing. The other pieces here are A
Sphere of Air Is Bound (2010) by Bruno Liberda, in which Ruppenthal uses
his voice as well as his trumpet and the composer contributes Kyma digital
audio processing; November Twilight
(2011) by Elainie Lillios, with the composer providing interactive
electroacoustics and Ruppenthal again performing with his voice and trumpet –
plus, in this case, on crotales (small tuned discs); Misty Magic Land (2004) by Allen Strange, with the composer on
digital media and Brian Belet proffering Kyma digital audio processing; and
Belet’s own System of Shadows (2007),
with Ruppenthal on both trumpet and flugelhorn and Belet again with a Kyma
contribution. There is always a certain otherworldliness to electronic and
electroacoustic music, long recognized and used to excellent effect by György
Ligeti and other giants of the field. Among the composers here, Belet embraces
this element most strongly, with his suite’s three movements called “Aurora
Borealis,” “Andromeda’s Dream,” and “Zephyr Apparition.” But all the works
partake of this sensibility to some degree, and the result is a kind of
sameness of sound despite the differences in the manner in which that sound is
produced. This is really a CD for electronic-music fanciers to a greater extent
than it is one for lovers of fine brass playing.
Brass figures to a
considerable extent in the music of Alan Beeler (1939-2016), as heard on a new
Navona CD that is essentially a tribute to the late composer – and something of
a hodgepodge of works for one or two instruments. Because every movement of every
piece here is quite short, it is possible to fit no fewer than 14 works by
Beeler comfortably on the disc. Two of the pieces feature brass instruments: Sonata for Bass Trombone and Piano, with
Dalibor Procházka and Lucie
Kaucká, and The Octatonic Tuba—Sonata for Tuba and
Piano, with Jiří Král and Kaucká.
Actually, to the extent that this CD has a theme or focus, it is the piano,
works for which dominate the recording: Kaucká performs 3 Early Pieces
for Solo Piano, while Karolina Rojahn is pianist in My Identity Suite, Multi-Tonal Suite, Beeler’s Fit ’06, Piano Sonata,
and 12-Tone Quartal Etude. And then
there are works including but not focused on piano: Sonata for Clarinet and Piano, with Aleš Janeček and Kaucká; Flute & Piano Sonata, with Petr Hladík and Kaucká; English Horn Sonata and Oboe
Sonata, both with Jennifer Slowick and Rojahn; and Sonata da Camera, with bassoonist Jan Dvořák and Kaucká. There is also a rather delicious
piece for solo vibraphone (Ladislav Bilan) called Something More Cheerful Suite—Variations on a Well-known Tune. The
formal variety is striking here, as is the use of so many different instruments
and instrumental combinations – all of which Beeler handles with skill, if not
always inspiration. The music fits his chosen means of conveying it well in all
cases, and if some pieces are less than enthralling, everything is so short
that a listener dissatisfied with one movement or even an entire work has only
to wait a minute or two for the next, hopefully more engaging one. This is
quite clearly a CD for people already familiar with Beeler and wanting a
“memory” recording showcasing, in one place, the extent of his involvement and
inventiveness in chamber music. The works show Beeler’s comfort in a variety of
styles: some have clear roots in 19th-century and even earlier
music, while others partake directly of the musical esthetics of the 20th
and 21st centuries. Nothing here will likely capture the interest of
someone unfamiliar with Beeler and turn the person into a fan, but those who
are fans already will enjoy what will likely be, for many of them, a mixture of
the familiar and unfamiliar, and a pleasant survey highlighting many of the
composer’s interests.
No comments:
Post a Comment