Shostakovich: String Quartets
Nos. 7-9. Altius Quartet (Andrew Giordano and Joshua Ulrich, violins;
Andrew Krimm, viola; Zachary Reaves, cello). Navona. $14.99.
Louis Spohr: Adagio for Bassoon and Piano; Josef Matern Marx: Sonata for
Bassoon and Piano; Johannes Meinardus
Coenen: Sonata for Bassoon and Piano; Julius Weissenborn: Notturno for
Bassoon and Piano; Gustav Schreck: Sonata for Bassoon and Piano; Ignaz Lachner:
Notturno for Bassoon and Piano.
Michel Bettez, bassoon; Jeanne Amièle, piano.
MSR Classics. $12.95.
Ann
Giffels: Sonata for Trumpet and Piano; Susan Mutter: Ages, for Trumpet and
Piano; Amy Riebs Mills: Red Dragonfly—Sonata for Trumpet and Piano; Dorothy
Gates: Shaken Not Stirred, for Trombone Quartet; Lauren Bernofsky: Two Latin
Dances for Trombone and Piano. Natalie Mannix, trombone; Stephanie Bruning,
piano; Tony Baker, Natalie Mannix, Steven Menard and Christopher Sharpe,
trombone quartet. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Steve Rouse: Sonata for Violin
and Piano; Form Fades; Nevolution; Ten Little Things; King Tango. Ravello.
$14.99.
The intimacy and
conversational nature of chamber music invite a level of communication among
performers and between performers and audience that can be quite exceptionally
moving, and chamber compositions are, for some composers, considerably more
intensely personal than their other works. Shostakovich’s 15 string quartets
cover at least as wide an emotional range as his 15 symphonies, and the
directness with which some of the quartets express the intensity of his
feelings makes high-quality performances taxing – albeit emotionally stirring –
for players and listeners alike. Unlike the symphonies, the quartets tend to be
end-weighted, and this was becoming particularly apparent by the time of No. 7,
which ends in a melancholy muted waltz that seems to stand as a direct tribute
to Shostakovich’s late first wife, in whose memory the work was written. On a
new Navona CD, the Altius Quartet does a particularly fine job of highlighting
some of the unusual structural elements of the quartet, such as the absence of
individual instruments from sections of it in a way that seems to accentuate
the theme of loss. The players do a fine job as well with No. 8, the most
frequently played of the Shostakovich quartets, in which the composer seems to
be dealing both with the Allied firebombing of Dresden late in World War II (he
was working on a film score on the topic while composing the quartet) and with
his own misgivings about recently joining the Communist Party. All five of this
quartet’s movements – which are played without a break – include the composer’s
thematic DSCH initials, so the personal elements of the music are abundantly clear,
even if the emotional specifics are not always so. Here the Altius Quartet
emphasizes a cohesive performance as opposed to the more-fragmented one of No.
7, the result being an effectively atmospheric reading. Quartets Nos. 7 and 8
were both composed in 1960 and gain some understanding by being considered as a
pair. The inclusion of No. 9 with them on this CD is thus a bit problematic –
this is a work from 1964 that actually pairs rather well with No. 10, which is
not heard here. No. 9 is a large-scale, almost symphonic work in which four of
the five movements (again played without pause) sound like quintessential
Shostakovich, with moods ranging from elegiac to meditative to sarcastic to
manic to purgatorial. The finale pulls all the emotional elements together in
an affirmation that contrasts sharply with the existential angst that concludes
No. 8. The big sound of the Altius Quartet is well-used here, and the work is
played with great skill, although the emotional turmoil of No. 8 seems to fit
these performers better than does the rather scattered landscape of No. 9.
Nevertheless, these are first-rate performances of some deeply stirring and
emotionally trenchant chamber music.
There is nothing with
anywhere near this impact on a new MSR Classics CD of 19th-century
works for bassoon and piano, but this disc offers pleasures of a different
sort. The bassoon is capable of being a highly expressive instrument – for
example, Vivaldi, who wrote more than three dozen concertos for it, was well
aware of this, as was Mozart in his single bassoon concerto. But by the 19th
century it tended to be relegated to a supporting, usually comic role in
instrumental music, becoming a good-natured and rather Falstaffian instrument
rather than one offering any profound communication. The works played by Michel
Bettez and Jeanne Amièle do not
really redress the balance in the bassoon’s favor, but they do accord it more
of a starring role than it often had at the time these pieces were written. And
if they are not especially consequential, neither are they entirely trivial or
dismissible as mere salon music. It is, however, interesting that Bettez and
Amièle
have had to reach well beyond the usual composers in order to find
bassoon-focused chamber music of this time that accords the wind instrument a
degree of respect. The best-known composer here, Louis Spohr (1784-1859),
offers the earliest work, a pleasant little piece titled Adagio but marked Larghetto
and dating to 1817. It is warm and rather sweet. The sonata by Josef Matern
Marx (c. 1791-1836) dates to 1830 and is a nicely constructed three-movement
work offering good contrast between its expressive second movement and its
bouncy finale. The sonata by Johannes Meinardus Coenen (1824-1899) was written
in about 1863 and follows a similar arc, but is a more-compact work and one
that emphasizes its central Recitative
– while Marx’s piece spends most of its time and energy on an extended first
movement. The three remaining works come from late in the century. The Notturno by Julius Weissenborn
(1837-1888), which dates to the composer’s final year, packs four contrasting
sections into six-and-a-half minutes while maintaining a crepuscular feeling
throughout. The sonata by Gustav Schreck (1849-1918) was written around 1890
and is solid and well-crafted, although not especially innovative. And the Notturno by Ignaz Lachner (1807-1895),
another piece from the final year of its composer’s life, is broadly conceived
and features some lovely interplay between bassoon and piano. Bettez is a very
fine advocate for this little-known music, and Amièle
provides fine support and partnership throughout this unusually pleasant foray
into unfamiliar Romantic-era material.
Another
new MSR Classics CD that also features excellent playing, but in the service of
much-more-recent compositions, includes five works by female composers – one
piece written in the mid-20th-century and the others in the 21st.
The composers’ gender is scarcely germane to these trombone-focused creations,
which are somewhat less successful at sustaining interest than are the
bassoon-and-piano ones played by Bettez and Amièle. Here
the trombonist, Natalie Mannix, exhibits excellent breath control and a warm,
pleasant tone throughout, while pianist Stephanie Bruning provides able accompaniment
for four of the five works. The earliest, from 1949-50, is the sonata by Ann
Giffels (1928-1993), a pithy and rather standard-issue three-movement work. The
five-movement Ages (2008) by Susan
Mutter (born 1962) is intended to depict human life at ages six, 15, 34, 66 and
92 – a clever concept that does not, however, lead to especially compelling
individual movements. The sonata called Red
Dragonfly (2012) by Amy Riebs Mills (born 1955) is more straightforward
structurally, including three movements simply numbered 1, 2 and 3, but it does
give the trombone considerable opportunity to display both emotional impact and
virtuosity. For rhythmic vitality, however, the most-effective work here is Two Latin Dances (2015) by Lauren
Bernofsky (born 1967), in which the Bossa
Nova and Tango are presented
effectively without overstaying their welcome. Also on the CD is a short encore
from 2012 called Shaken Not Stirred
by Dorothy Gates (born 1966) – a piece whose title will immediately resonate with
James Bond fans, and a work that nicely weaves the four trombones for which it
is written into an intriguing aural mixture. This is a (+++) CD that, despite
offering some rather ordinary pieces, will certainly please trombonists and
listeners interested in hearing recent compositions for the instrument.
Another
(+++) CD of contemporary chamber music is a Ravello release of five very
different works by Steve Rouse (born 1953). Here too listeners will encounter a
sonata and a dance piece. The sonata is for violin (Ben Sung) and piano (Jihye
Chang-Sung) and consists primarily of the sort of atonal stabbings and
relaxations familiar from many other modern works; the third movement is
supposed to be dancelike but is too awkward and unbalanced for that description.
King Tango, on the other hand, does
take an unusual and effective approach to a dance form, using flute (Evelyn
Loehrlein) and double bass (Sidney King) to produce a surprisingly sinuous
combination of instruments with ranges that are about as different as they can
possibly be. Another work whose combination of instruments is intriguing is Nevolution, which is for corno da caccia
(Michael Tunnell) and piano (Meme Tunnell). Rouse uses the Baroque hunting
horn’s limited range to its full extent in the first and third movements, but
the subdued second movement, “Star Quiet,”
is the real surprise here, allowing the horn a degree of lyricism that is quite
unexpected and affecting, even though not really in keeping with the
instrument’s reasons for being. Unfortunately, the piano part of Nevolution is of only slight interest.
Also here is a work for clarinet (Matthew Nelson) and percussion (Greg Byrne)
called Ten Little Things, and it is a
compendium of many elements that contemporary composers apparently consider
forward-looking while unconvinced audiences deem them self-indulgent and
meaningless. There is no correlation between the section titles (“The Sight,”
“The Nature,” “The Charm,” and so on) and the sonic blips, bleeps and blasts
that emerge both from percussion and from the clarinet, whose warmth of sound
is wholly absent here. This is a piece that comes across as if the composer is
so enamored of his own cleverness that he is interested barely at all in
whether an audience is even paying attention, much less becoming involved in
the material. Somewhat more successful is Form
Fades, a five-movement composition for flute/piccolo, clarinet/bass
clarinet, violin, cello, piano, and percussion, performed here by the Indiana
University New Music Ensemble conducted by David Dzubay. The movements have the
sort of pseudo-clever titles that are all too common in contemporary works:
“Ritual Fills,” “Pulse Frees,” “Memory Feels,” “Petal Floats,” and “Hammer
Falls.” And of course those titles are quite meaningless. But here there is
some interest in the way Rouse combines and contrasts the disparate
instruments, and if there is little offering sustained involvement to an
audience, there are at least several instances in which the sound quality of
the ensemble has an interest level of its own. The music means much less than
its overdone and pretentious titles pretend it does, but it is at least
moderately engaging from time to time. The most interesting thing about this
entire CD is the way Rouse gravitates to instruments that are as different as
they can be and finds ways of connecting them, even if imperfectly and only
from time to time within his works.
No comments:
Post a Comment