Chopin: Nocturnes (complete);
Ballades Nos. 1 and 4. Eliane Rodrigues, piano. Navona. $14.99 (2 CDs).
Johann Kaspar (Caspar Joseph)
Mertz: Fantasies for Solo Guitar based on operas by Verdi. Alan Rinehart,
guitar. Ravello. $14.99.
Lumina. Westminster Kantorei
conducted by Amanda Quist. Westminster Choir College. $16.99.
The familiarity of Chopin’s Nocturnes does not prevent pianists from
always finding new thoughts, ideas and emotions in them. Some of these charming
miniatures, derived from the works of John Field but made wholly more
expressive by Chopin, are indeed dark, but a great many of them are more
crepuscular – twilight tone poems filled with sensuous melodies and a contemplative,
often slightly melancholy atmosphere. It is almost as if they are songs without
words, miniature tale-tellings whose exact story lines are unknown. What Eliane
Rodrigues does that is fascinating in her new performances for Navona is to
provide each of the 21 Nocturnes with
text by Belgian pianist Jantien Brys; the text in turn is based on stories by
Rodrigues herself. The words are not heard on the recording but presented in
the accompanying notes, and they are structured as a kind of imaginary diary, something
Chopin might conceivably have written for each of the Nocturnes but did not. The words with No. 2 in E-flat, for example,
begin, “A faint hint of lavender, mixed with something I had never smelled
before.” And those with No. 13 in C minor say, “I’ve come to accept that I will
never be truly happy. Life has taken everything from me, but frankly, I
couldn’t care less.” Such writing is scarcely what Chopin would have left and
did leave behind, and the colloquialisms are those of today rather than the first
half of the 19th century. Still, the words provide an interesting
jumping-off point for a series of remarkably sensitive and well-considered
interpretations. Rather than seeing the Nocturnes
as a set, Rodrigues views them as independent pieces within a totality, and in
this sense she parallels the music to the verbiage, providing connections of
mood (as the words do of writing style) but keeping each entry (musical or
verbal) independent of the others. The result is a fascinating performance that
almost comes across as a multimedia odyssey through Chopin’s life, loves and
illness. In fact, “performance” is not quite the right word – it should be
plural, “performances,” since it is the multiplicity of moods within the
general framework of the Nocturnes that
Rodrigues brings forth here to especially good effect. Of course, it is
entirely possible, even desirable, to listen to this two-CD set without ever
reading or thinking about the specific words Brys has written – one adheres
one’s own words, or one’s own feelings and emotions, to these pieces all the
time, and that is exactly as it should be. But a second encounter with
Rodrigues’ performance, listening this time while incorporating the texts, is
revelatory, not so much of the music itself as of the varying emotions that may be evoked by it and may be reflected in, or inspired by,
Rodrigues’ playing. This unusual handling of a set of very-well-known pieces
has two of the four Ballades included
as well, and that itself is interesting, since each of these is significantly
longer than any of the Nocturnes and
gives Rodrigues an opportunity to explore a very different emotional canvas –
which she does with equal skill. This is, all in all, a thoroughly fascinating
release.
A new Ravello CD featuring
guitarist Alan Rinehart is fascinating as well, but for very different reasons.
The works here are as little-known as Chopin’s are well-known. Indeed, the
composer, Johann Kaspar Mertz, his name sometimes given as Caspar Joseph Mertz
(1806-1856 in either case), is almost completely obscure today. But he was an
important guitar virtuoso in his time, and was in fact responsible for creating
guitar works that in many ways paralleled the emotionalism and technical
requirements of the piano pieces of none other than Chopin. This method of
guitar composition was not exactly a dead end, but over time it proved mush
less popular than the approaches of Fernando Sor, who looked to the classical
models of Haydn and Mozart, and Mauro Giuliani, whose guitar music partakes of
Rossini’s bel canto style. Changing
tastes were not kind to Mertz, and they have never quite changed back far
enough for his music to become popular again. But Rinehart may have found an
exceptional entry point for restoring Mertz to some degree of popularity. Like
other virtuoso players of his day, on many instruments, Mertz the guitarist frequently
played pieces that he had written based on popular operas of the time, from
Flotow’s Martha to Meyerbeer’s Le prophète to Donizetti’s Don Pasquale to Mozart’s Don Giovanni. Among these virtuoso
pastiches are a number from operas by Verdi, and it is six of those that
Rinehart plays – and plays extremely well – on this CD. All six of the operas
are well-known today and will be familiar to contemporary operagoers: Nabucco, Ernani, Rigoletto, Il Trovatore, La
Traviata and Il Vespri Siciliani.
And each of the fantasies is a gem – a semi-precious one, it is true, without
aspirations to profundity or anything revelatory, but nevertheless something
sparkling and lovely. The complexity of the guitar parts is considerable, and
tends to become more so toward the fantasies’ conclusions; the handling of the
operas’ themes is generally straightforward, so the music is instantly
recognizable to any audience that knows the works; and the overall virtuosic
effect of the music is highly impressive – it is hard to see how some of this
material can be played with only two hands and 10 fingers. There is nothing on
this CD to indicate that Mertz was a great or even near-great composer, but
there is quite a lot to show that he was a great or near-great guitarist. And
the music unfolds with so much pleasure in Rinehart’s highly capable hands that
it is hard not to wish for more of the same: Mertz wrote quite a bit of other solo-guitar
music, plus some for two guitars in which one instrument is tuned differently
from the other, and if other compositions are as intriguing and well-crafted as
these, it would be wonderful to have additional Mertz recordings as good as
this one.
The type of rethinking on a new Westminster
Choir College recording does not involve new views of familiar music or a foray
into long-obscure material. Instead, this CD, simply called Lumina, is distinguished by its
juxtapositions of music by different composers from different eras. There is
nocturnal music here of a vocal type, for example: the disc opens with Josef
Rheinberger’s Abendlied. But this
clearly Romantic work (Rheinberger lived from 1839 to 1901) is immediately
contrasted with three pieces by Purcell: Miserere;
Remember not, Lord, our offences; and Jehova,
quam multi sunt hostes mei – and the two languages of the Purcell pieces
themselves represent an effective contrast. The unexpectedness of sequencing is
what makes this entire disc distinctive: after Purcell’s works comes
Mendelssohn’s Heilig, then Bach’s
hyper-familiar Komm, Jesu, Komm, and
then Heinrich Schütz’s Selig sind die Toten. Next is John
Dunstable’s Ave Maris Stella, and
then Hildegard von Bingen’s O Vivens
Fons, Byrd’s Vigilate, Tallis’ If You Love Me, and finally Lord, For Thy Tender Mercy’s Sake by the
little-known Richard Farrant (c. 1525-1580). The combination of familiar and
less-familiar material, all of it sung in exemplary and sensitive fashion by
the Westminster Kantorei under Amanda Quist, makes this a highly attractive
disc for listeners interested in a variety of religious expressions of
different eras and in different languages. That is a somewhat rarefied group,
and for that reason as well as its brevity (46 minutes), this disc gets a (+++)
rating. But for those who are inspired by and enamored of liturgical music from
multiple eras, sung with great beauty of sound and excellent articulation, this
will be a CD to cherish.
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