Franz Reizenstein: Sonata in
G-sharp; Geoffrey Bush: Sonata; John Ireland: Sonata No. 2 in A minor.
Louisa Stonehill, violin; Nicholas Burns, piano. Lyrita. $18.99.
Martinů: Variations on a
Theme of Rossini; Ariette for Cello and Piano; Seven Arabesques; Suite
Miniature; Nocturnes for Cello and Piano; Variations on a Slovakian Theme.
Meredith Blecha-Wells, cello; Sun Min Kim, piano. Navona. $14.99.
Karl Höller: Fantasie for
Violin and Organ; Triptychon for Organ Solo; Improvisation for Cello and Organ.
William Preucil, violin; Roy Christensen, cello; Barbara Harbach, organ. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
Altius Quartet: Dress Code.
Joshua Ulrich and Andrew Giordano, violins; Andrew Krimm, viola; Zachary
Reaves, cello. Navona. $14.99.
Stories for Our Time:
Contemporary Music for Trumpet by Women Composers. Thomas Pfotenhauer,
trumpet, flugelhorn and E-flat trumpet; Vincent Fuh, piano. MSR Classics.
$12.95.
Zhen Chen: Music for Piano and
Chinese Folk Instruments. Zhen Chen, piano; Jiaju Shen, pipa; Feifei Yang,
erhu; Yixuan Pang, voice. Navona. $14.99.
Three little-known wartime violin-and-piano
sonatas from two different wars show just how effectively composers can
communicate with a paucity of instruments. Franz Reizenstein (1911-1968) wrote
his Sonata in G-sharp in 1945. There
is a reason that the sonata is not designated as being in G-sharp major or
G-sharp minor: it moves restlessly between the major and minor keys, which the
piano establishes at the outset. The uncertainty is a formative element of the
work’s first movement. The second movement is a bouncy Scherzo with some
obeisance to Shostakovich. The third and last is complex, abrupt and
fast-changing, and eventually leads to a juxtaposition of B natural and B-sharp
that reinforces the work’s ambiguous tonality. The underlying feeling of being
deeply unsettled by a world at war comes through far more clearly than the
work’s tonality does. Louisa Stonehill and Nicholas Burns, who call themselves
the Steinberg Duo, play the work sure-handedly and with empathetic
understanding. They do an equally fine job with the sonata by Geoffrey Bush
(1920-1998), who wrote this piece in the same year as Reizenstein’s in G-sharp,
1945. This is the world première
recording of the single-movement work, whose thoroughgoing chromatic
uncertainty somewhat parallels that of Reizenstein: Bush never allows any key
to establish and maintain itself for more than a few measures. The melodies of
the work are quite lovely and perhaps reflective of Bush’s hopes for a better
postwar world (he was an avowed pacifist); but the setting within which those
melodies are heard is that of a world that is at best uncertain of where it
stands and where life is going. The second sonata by John Ireland (1879-1962)
dates to the previous world war and was first heard in 1917, at which time it
caused such a sensation that the first printed edition sold out even before
publication. It is an attractive three-movement work whose instant popularity,
from the standpoint of a century later, is a bit hard to comprehend. Certainly,
though, it has effectively expressed emotional ups and downs: there is clear
anguish in parts, balanced by warm lyricism that elicits pity for the horrors
of the conflict. The central second movement is the most interesting, evoking
the feeling of a death march but containing a beautiful, optimism-filled tune
in the center that surely reflected the initial audience’s hopes for the
future. The Lyrita recording is technically fine but has bizarre errors in the
dates of both Bush and Ireland (the enclosed booklet is correct).
Many of the works of
Bohuslav Martinů (1890-1959)
were also influenced by war, but that is not the focus of the new Navona CD on
which cellist Meredith Blecha-Wells and pianist Sun Min Kim offer five of his
suites of short pieces plus a very brief Ariette.
Although one of the four Nocturnes
lasts six minutes and another almost four, nothing else on the CD reaches three
minutes in length: this is Martinů
as miniaturist. The style of the works is generally conservative, but the
frequent overlay of Czech folk music gives the works a distinctive touch that
is typical of Martinů. The
brightness of the Rossini variations contrasts nicely with the flowing, lyrical
line of the Ariette. The Arabesques are generally upbeat and
pleasant and not very consequential. Suite
Miniature, in seven movements, has the delicacy and some of the flippancy
of a piece for or about children, although it is neither. The Nocturnes are somewhat more expansive
and the only works here with a modicum of depth of feeling, although even here the
overall impression is mostly one of gentle play and contemplative relaxation.
The Variations on a Slovakian Theme
show Martinů’s skill in
variation form even better than do those on Rossini’s theme, and they allow the
cello a kind of broad folkloric expressiveness that fits the material very well
and that Blecha-Wells carries off with considerable skill. The interplay
between cellist and pianist and their fine ensemble work are major attractions
of this disc of mostly lightweight music.
The three Karl Höller works on a new MSR Classics
release focus neither on violin nor on cello, although both are present. The
dominant sound here is that of the organ, which is scarcely an instrument
usually associated with chamber music. Barbara Harbach, a very fine organist as
well as a skilled composer in her own right, clearly finds the music of Höller (1907-1987) congenial. The
tonal language here is primarily that of the late Romantic era, but it is blended, generally rather seamlessly, with
the neoclassicism of Paul Hindemith and some of the approaches to organ music
favored by Max Reger. Indeed, two of the works on this disc have neo-Baroque
sensibilities despite their more-modern harmonic structure. Triptychon is a three-movement solo
organ work “on the Easter sequence ‘Victimae paschali laudes,’” and Improvisation is a five-movement piece
“on the spiritual folksong ‘Schönster Herr Jesus.’” The religious underpinning
of both these works ties to the traditional centrality of the church in organ
music, yet Höller’s use of a
folksong as the basis for Improvisation
pulls the instrument our of a strictly ecclesiastical setting and into the
wider world. Unlike Martinů, Höller does not seem to take the folk
elements of his underlying material deeply to heart, at least in this work, but
he writes just as effectively for cello and organ as Martinů does for cello and piano – and in
fact Höller’s integration of
the stringed and wind instruments is so well done that listeners may wonder why
the combination is so rare. As for Triptychon,
it is a more conventional piece in its sacred theme and in Höller’s handling of the material, and
at nearly half an hour it is somewhat overly expansive, without the tight
integration of form that, for example, Widor and Vierne brought to their organ
symphonies. Harbach certainly plays the piece very well, though. As for the
somewhat slighter Fantasie, here the
balance of violin and organ is attractive – and in some ways more immediately
appealing than that of the lower, more-resonant cello with the organ in Improvisation. Again, though, the
single-movement Fantasie uses the two
instruments in such interesting ways that listeners may wish for further
examples of this type of strings-and-organ combination, which in skilled hands
like Höller’s offers a very
intriguing mixture of sounds.
There is nothing unusual in
the instrumental combination on a new Navona release featuring the Altius
Quartet – but the quartet itself is determined, absolutely determined, to make
the recording as unusual as possible. Thus, while the performers do play one of
Haydn’s wonderful, balanced, carefully structured quartets (Op. 74, No. 1),
they apparently think it would be beneath them to perform the piece as Haydn
intended. Oh, no – that would not have sufficient “contemporary chic.” So after
the first movement of the quartet, the players perform two other, entirely
unrelated works; then they give the quartet’s second movement; then another
unrelated piece; then the third movement; then two more pieces having nothing
to do with Haydn; and then the finale – followed by something else. The whole
approach is reminiscent of the classic Monty Python line, “And now for
something completely different” – an indication of a deliberate non sequitur. And that does indeed seem
to be what the Altius Quartet here pursues. Among the pieces that interrupt
Haydn is William Bolcom’s Three Ghost
Rags, given here in the order 2-1-3 (for no apparent reason): this work
itself suffers from being broken up into component parts. And then there is
something called Take It that meshes
Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five” with Michael Jackson’s “Beat It.” And a medley of
Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven” and “Kashmir.” And Ben E. King’s “Stand by
Me.” And, at the CD’s very end, there is “Take on Me” by a-ha (sic). Certainly the disc is intended to
be playful and with-it and all that, and certainly there are playful elements
both in Haydn’s quartet (1793) and Bolcom’s music (1970). And in everything
else here, for that matter. But a juxtaposition of, say, the Haydn (played as a
whole) with the Bolcom (played in the order the composer intended) would have
made for quite a fine contrast without the necessity of breaking the pieces up
into their component parts and tossing in little bits of this and that as well.
The Altius Quartet – which, by the way, plays all the music quite well – seems
to be trying too hard to be cool and contemporary and cognizant of the
extremely short attention span of many listeners today. The longest track on
the CD runs less than seven minutes, while the full Haydn quartet would require
that people pay attention for (horrors!) 23 minutes. This CD turns out to be
testimony to the superficiality of far too much music and far too many
listeners in our time.
There is contemporary flair
as well on a new MSR Classics CD that is also trying perhaps a bit too hard to
be, well, contemporary. It features the very fine trumpeter Thomas Pfotenhauer
in six world première
recordings of six pieces by six female composers. It is the combined emphasis
on all-new material and all-female material that makes this into something of a
“cause” recording – which is actually a shame, since the works here all contain
elements of considerable interest independent of their provenance. That simply
means they are worthy when judged as
music, not as music from a specified era or by someone of a specified
gender – that kind of musical “identity politics” is really quite unnecessary
here. Jazz Professor Glasses for solo trumpet and flugelhorn (2008)
by Anne Guzzo (born 1968) is especially interesting, its three movements
exploring some of the outer reaches of both instruments to good effect – and
with a strong flavoring of Chinese influence in the first movement and of jazz
in the finale. All the other works pair Pfotenhauer with pianist Vincent Fuh,
who provides very able backup and accompaniment. The longest piece is Framed (2009) by Cecilia McDowell (born
1951), an interesting seven-movement Pictures
at an Exhibition derivative intended to capture the artistic styles of Auguste
Renoir, James McNeill Whistler, Alberto Giacometti, Hendrick Avercamp, Andy
Warhol, Simon Marmion, and Alexander Rodchenko. Whether it does so or not will
depend on each listener’s response and on how well an individual knows the
painters – but whether or not the musical portraits are wholly successful, they
certainly do show the wide range of colors and emotions of which the trumpet is
capable. Two nicely compressed three-movement works here effectively contrast
the trumpet’s lyrical capabilities with its martial side: Concertino (1989) by Ida Gotkovsky (born 1933) and Sonata (2002) by Elaine Fine (born
1959). There is also the disc’s three-movement title work by Faye-Ellen
Silverman (born 1947), Stories for Our
Time (2007), and this piece takes trumpet style further than the others do,
through greater dissonance, a wider variety of performance techniques, and
stronger contrast among the movements. Silverman’s work follows and stands in
strong contrast to the lovely single movement called Look Little Low Heavens (1992) by Hilary Tann (born 1947). Inspired
by Gerard Manley Hopkins’ poem Spring,
Tann’s work is gentle, serene and lyrical except for a central dramatic
section. Tann, interestingly, is another composer who, like Guzzo, has drawn
inspiration from the Orient, although in Tann’s case from Japan rather than
China.
Neither Guzzo nor Tann has,
however, absorbed the influence of Chinese music in the way than Zhen Chen has
– as is abundantly clear from a new Navona CD. The 10 works here sound as if
they are drawn from Chinese folk music, but in actuality they are not –
instead, Chen has studied and analyzed the sounds of the music and brought it
into forms that allow some of the material to be played on the piano. The other
instruments here are the lute-like pipa and bowed erhu. Two pieces, Jade and Dance Floor Banter, are for piano and pipa; two, Regret and Longing, are for piano and erhu; two, Plum Blossom Chant and Lament,
are for piano and voice; two, Springfield
and Turpan Tango, are for piano, pipa
and erhu; one, Stroll by the Lake, is
for piano, pipa and voice; and the final work on the disc, Recollection, is for solo piano. The combinations show clearly that
Chen has carefully thought through the ways in which these instruments
(including the voice, which is used here primarily as an instrument, whether
speaking words or singing a vocalise) can interweave with and complement each
other. To ears more accustomed to Western music, the works here have a sameness
of sound that makes them seem longer than in fact they are: the CD runs just 42
minutes but seems to stretch out much farther. As background music or music
designed to enhance meditation or contemplation, the works come across well;
but except for Turpan Tango and Dance Floor Banter, which are more
upbeat than the other pieces and have some Western-style dance rhythms at their
core, there is little to distinguish the pieces here except for their titles.
As a showcase for the ways in which Oriental and Occidental musical thinking
can be blended and hybridized, Chen’s creations are interesting. But the
hybridization wears thin rather quickly and seems more appropriate for
contemplative mood-setting than for any focus on the music as music.