The Christmas Album: Holiday
Favorites for Nine French Horns. American Horn Quartet and Queensland
Symphony Horns conducted by Peter Luff and Kerry Turner. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Masters of the Guitar, Volume 3:
Cuba, 1955-1965. José Rey
de la Torre, Elias Barreiro, Héctor
García, Juan Mercadal and Leo
Brouwer, guitar. IDIS. $14.99.
Antti Samuli Hernesniemi: Piano
Music. Antti Samuli Hernesniemi, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Carl Vollrath: Dragon Land; The
Land of Lanterns; And Bugles Sang. Moravian Philharmonic Wind &
Percussion Ensemble conducted by Petr Vronský and Stanislav Vavřínek. Navona. $14.99.
Ken Walicki: Light; Black Water;
Sabah; Cyberistan; nada Brahma. Ravello. $14.99.
Some CDs seem to exist mostly
as sonic celebrations, their focus being the instrument or instruments profiled
more than the specific music being played. A pre-seasonal MSR Classics CD
called The Christmas Album fits this
description neatly. There is nothing particularly unusual about the music here,
from Mendelssohn’s Weihnachten to
Handel’s For Unto Us a Child Is Born
to Leroy Anderson’s ubiquitous Sleigh
Ride. The time span of the material is a wide one, ranging from the 16th-century
carol Lo, How a Rose E’er Blooming to
the decidedly contemporary and only modestly snarky You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch. But the real enjoyment here comes
simply from listening to the warm and often clever arrangements for nine French
horns, with the occasional inclusion of didgeridoo (played by Harry Wilson).
The whole project springs from the mind of Kerry Turner of the American Horn
Quartet, who not only performs on horn but also acts as percussionist and is
composer of two offerings here: the three-movement Symphony of Carols and concluding Hymnus. The performances are as smooth as butter, taking full
advantage of the horn’s inherent warmth of sound and expanding it so it, well,
oozes through multiple instruments. The players are clearly virtuosos, but
there is no grandstanding here (except in Wilson’s 16-second Solo Didgeridoo). Everything is in the
service of camaraderie and warmth of feeling, an appropriate mixture for the
Christmas season even when the calendar says Christmas is not yet on the
horizon. Horn players will especially enjoy getting an earful of what their
instruments, in combination, can sound like.
The sound of one single
instrument, the guitar, permeates the third album in the Masters of the Guitar series on the IDIS label. Actually, sometimes
the virtuoso performers heard here sound as if they are playing two instruments
at once, or as if they have 20 fingers. These are famous Cuban and
Cuban-American guitarists in performances recorded 50 to 60 years ago, and if
the sound is not really up to modern standards, it is certainly acceptable, and
the finger work of the guitarists comes through clearly and cleanly. Non-guitarists
will be hard-pressed to decide whether the different sounds of the performers
result from differing techniques, different instruments, or the different
characteristics of the music they perform; but really, this matters little,
since the point of the CD is to put on display the music-making of five masters
of this instrument. José Rey de la Torre (1917-1994), Elias Barreiro (born
1930), Héctor García (also born 1930), Juan Mercadal
(1925-1998), and Leo Brouwer (born 1939) all show the vitality of guitar
playing and the considerable virtuosity guitar masters bring to bear on music
ranging from works by Bach, Carulli, Handel, and Domenico Scarlatti to ones by
Villa-Lobos, Albéniz, and
Brouwer himself (his Elogio de la danza
is a highlight here). Many of the specific pieces on the CD are rather
inconsequential in and of themselves, but as showpieces for the wide emotional
range of the guitar and its master players, they serve very well indeed. The
disc will be especially intriguing to guitarists, just as the one featuring
excellent horn playing will be particularly attractive to performers on that
instrument.
Recordings with a piano
focus are far more common than ones featuring guitar or horn, but the new MSR
Classics release of music and performances by contemporary Finnish composer Antti
Samuli Hernesniemi (born 1950) is unusual in that it is largely about the sound
of three different pianos. Hernesniemi’s music shows the usual influences on
modern composers’ work, including jazz and folk music as well as traditional
classical forms. What is interesting here are the ways in which the music comes
across in different sonic environments, depending on which instrument
Hernesniemi is using to produce it. Poem
(2004), Shore (2004) and City (2004) are all heard on a Yamaha
Clavinova, a digital instrument with aspirations to grand-piano status.
Hernesniemi seems particularly comfortable with this instrument, and that may
be why it dominates the recording. But the music itself has more heft and aural
staying power when Hernesniemi takes to a full-sounding Bechstein for Three Waltzes (2004, 2016, 2003) and Bridge (2016). The most-common of all
modern concert pianos, a Steinway Model B, also makes an appearance here in the
final work on the disc, Ballade
(2013). The disc is really aimed only at people already familiar with
Hernesniemi’s music: it is the third devoted to his compositions, and at 45
minutes is so short that only an enthusiast will likely be highly enthusiastic
about it. Much of the music here is on the abrasive side, although the three
waltzes (one of them a piano arrangement of a song) are nicely done. However,
what is most interesting is the way Bridge,
written as a connecting piece between Shore
and City and using a theme from the
latter, really does bridge the other two works – while sounding different
because of its performance on a Bechstein rather than the Clavinova. Pianists
will find the sonic possibilities of this music more intriguing, on the whole,
than the pieces in and of themselves.
The primary sonic focus on a
new Navona CD of music by Carl Vollrath is actually three focuses: China, a
wind-and-percussion mixture, and the solo clarinet. Dragon Land and The Land of
Lanterns are both clarinet concertos (in which Aleš Janeček is a fine
soloist). Layered melodies predominate in these works, especially The Land of Lanterns, and the result is
a rather unusual treatment of what amounts to polyphony in a contemporary
context. The solo clarinet weaves in and out of expressiveness in the
two-movement The Land of Lanterns,
its rich lower register getting fairly short shrift most of the time but being
used often enough to create some mellow sounds among the more-acerbic ones that
dominate other sections. The opening leaps of the second movement and the following
contrast between clarinet and percussion are especially attractive to hear. Dragon Land is more descriptive in
intent, with each of its three movements given a title: “The Last Emperor’s
Palace,” “Summer Palace,” and “The Warrior Monk.” Here there is greater drama
and intensity, especially in the final movement, and the sound blends
folk-music influences with some distinctive percussion passages and frequent
dynamic contrasts. The sound tapestry is different in the third work on the CD,
And Bugles Sang, since this is a
trumpet concerto – but oddly enough, “Part I” of this work bears the title “The
Birth of a Warrior Monk,” while “Parts II & III” are labeled “Forgotten
Graves & Tales of an Aged Warrior Monk.” And Bugles Sang takes its title from a poem in Britten’s War Requiem, and Vollrath tries in his
concerto to explore some of the same themes that Britten handled in that work.
But the main aural effect of Vollrath’s concerto is not unease or
thoughtfulness, nor is it martial (despite the use of bugle-like trumpet calls
at some points). Vollrath’s work gives a primary
impression of uncertainty, of not knowing what is coming next, where any part
of the concerto ties to what has come before or where any specific section is
going to lead. The trumpet soloist (Ondřej Jurčeka) is not called on for the same
extensive repertoire of sounds as is the clarinet soloist in the other
concertos, but this is a solidly virtuosic work whose effects often lie as much
in the very fine playing of the Moravian Philharmonic Wind & Percussion
Ensemble as in the soloist’s contribution. The snare-drum opening of the second
part of the concerto, followed by the solo trumpet’s intoning of what sounds
like the first phrase of Copland’s Fanfare
for the Common Man, captures the somewhat puzzling sonic canvas on which
Vollrath paints these musical portraits.
It is electronic sounds,
plain and simple, that dominate a new Ravello CD of the music of Ken Walicki.
Well, actually not so simple. Walicki likes to use traditional instruments in
nontraditional ways – or rather in ways that are common in contemporary
composers’ work but are outside the classical-music tradition. Light, for example, uses a double bass
(played by Tom Peters) as a springboard for extended electronic sounds and
effects, letting the instrument’s underlying acoustic sound emerge just long
enough to be subsumed under the usual feedback loops and squeals of
electronics. Black Water is for
clarinet (Virginia Costa Figueiredo) and piano (Füreya Ünal), and while the
music has little direction, it allows the instruments’ basic natures to emerge
long enough to produce some nicely paced, rhythmic sections with interesting
combinatorial elements. Sabah is for
flute (Rachel Mellis), using the airy breathiness associated with the
instrument to expand into a kind of cloudlike milieu that is interestingly
atmospheric for a while but wears thin long before the conclusion of its
13-minute length. Cyberistan is a
piano work (Ünal again) whose intriguing title is its best element: the music
itself is a rather uninspired set of contrasts between the piano, mostly at its
percussive best, with electronic sighs and such, all within a kind of ostinato
envelope that may be intended as expansive but that comes across as overextended.
Finally there is nada Brahma, the
first word non-capitalized, which is a string quartet in which the strings are
decidedly subservient to the electronics and seem to spend most of their time
struggling against each other rather than in complementary mode. The Eclipse
Quartet (Sara Parkins and Sarah Thornblade, violins; Alma Lisa Fernandez,
viola; Maggie Parkins, cello) approaches the work with gusto, and the
interweaving of the instruments with electronics is managed with considerable
skill. But the piece seems more concerned with displaying techniques – martellato here, pizzicato there, spiccato
there – than with using the players’ technical capabilities for any expressive
purposes. Indeed, it seems here and in the other works by Walicki on this CD
that the composer is more interested in showing himself and the performers all
the things that can be done by combining traditional musical instruments with
electronic enhancements – in a kind of compositional étude – than in using the various techniques to create a
meaningful (as opposed to merely interesting) soundscape.
No comments:
Post a Comment