Winter’s Night. Skylark Vocal Ensemble. $20.
Joseph
Summer: Shakespeare Concerts 6—No Enemy but Winter and Rough Weather. Navona. $14.99.
Garth Baxter: Music for Voice and Piano. Navona. $14.99.
Matthew Burtner: The Ceiling Floats Away. EcoSono Ensemble. Ravello.
$14.99.
The dozen voices of Skylark Vocal Ensemble
blend beautifully, seamlessly and thoughtfully on a new CD aimed at a very,
very small audience indeed. To feel this disc’s full effect, a listener must
first be familiar with little-known composer Hugo Distler (1908-1942) and
specifically with his Christmas cantata, Weihnachtsgeschichte. Then the listener must
know that the cantata contains seven variations on the medieval carol Es ist
ein Ros entsprungen (“A Spotless Rose”). And then the listener can start to
appreciate the way Skylark Vocal Ensemble presents all seven of those
variations, interspersed with intimate and reflective music of many eras that
relates in one way or another to Distler’s work. The relationship may come
through hearing the setting of A Spotless Rose by Herbert Howells (1892-1983),
or the plainchant Corde natus ex parentis (on which the German carol is based),
or the never-before-recorded Salvatorem Expectamus by Gregorio Allegri (1582-1652),
or one of the other pieces here. The disc is a 50-minute tour of one portion of
one part of Distler’s output, including many works on similar or analogous
themes from the distant past or from contemporary composers inspired by older
music. The overall feeling of the disc is one of respectful thoughtfulness in a
performance so burnished that it almost glows – listeners who simply want to
hear beautiful a cappella singing will enjoy and admire what is offered here.
However, the structure of the CD and its reason for being are so abstruse that
the material is unlikely to reach out to a very large audience, if doing so was
ever its intention. Material like this may be better presented in a live
concert, with continual explanation of what the ensemble is doing by choosing
and performing specific works – and explication as it does so – than as a CD.
The sixth Navona release drawn from the
Shakespeare Concert Series is also a rarefied production, its material gathered
under a line from As You Like It. Some of the material here is by Joseph
Summer, founder and executive director of the series, and there is also some
vocal material by Walton and Korngold (among other things, two versions of Under
the Greenwood Tree), Thomas Morley, Peter Warlock, Thomas Arne, Dominic
Argento, and Donald Busarow. The compilation of songs from Shakespeare,
recorded at various times from 2013 to 2016 and performed by a variety of
singers, is kept interesting not only by its inherent variety but also by the
different forms of vocal accompaniment. These include piano, harpsichord and,
in one case, French horn plus piano; there is also a Summer setting of Beseech
You, Sir, Be Merry for vocal quartet a cappella. There is no particular order
to the material, no story line and no special reason for including specific
composers’ work in this sequence rather than another. There are pleasures to be
found throughout the CD, notably in the songs with harpsichord accompaniment (which
lends the words a certain piquancy) and in some of the musical scene painting
in the vocal lines, such as the falling melodic phrases of The Quality of
Mercy. Like the Skylark Vocal Ensemble’s disc, though, this is a CD best
enjoyed for the sheer quality of the performances rather than for any
particular thematic focus (although all the material relates to winter in one
way or another). The arrangement of the songs is clearly one that has been
carefully thought out, just as is the Skylark Vocal Ensemble’s selection and
sequence with its central attention to Distler. But listeners who are not privy
to the live performances of the Shakespeare Concert Series and to Summer’s
reasoning for assembling items in the specific way heard here will seek clarity
of purpose in vain: they will do best just to sit back and enjoy some of the
greatest English-language poetry ever written as set to music in a variety of
styles by composers of varying predilections.
The poetry on another Navona CD is drawn
from multiple sources and is, inevitably, more of a mixed bag – but all the
settings are by a single composer, Garth Baxter, and share a certain similar
approach to the verbal material. All these pieces feature pianist Andrew
Stewart as accompanist for tenor Peter Scott Drackley or one of three sopranos
(Jessica Satava, Katherine Uhna Keem, Annie Gill). There is material here from
a Baxter opera called Lily, which uses a libretto by Lisa VanAuken; from Baxter
himself and his wife, after Willa Cather (Grandmother, Think Not I Forget);
from Edna St. Vincent Millay (Afternoon on a Hill, Lament and Travel); from
Linda Pastan (the four poems in Skywriting); and from others. Baxter’s musical settings,
although they vary a bit with the themes of the words, have a certain
similarity that quickly becomes familiar when listening to the disc, to such an
extent that the use of a flute (played by Melissa Wertheimer) in a setting of
Willa Cather’s April Twilight comes as a real surprise. All the singers handle
the vocal lines with feeling and sensitivity, and Stewart’s accompaniment is
quite good – he has a fine sense of the right times to bring the piano to the
fore and to let it subside into the background. There is a kind of crepuscular
feeling to much of the material on this disc, whether the music partakes more
of folk song, art song, or old vocal forms (as in Three Madrigals). Some of the
chosen words lead to intriguing sequences within a single piece, as when Four
Views of Love starts with Yeats’ well-known When You Are Old and progresses
eventually to Thomas Hardy’s A Thunderstorm in Town. Taken as a whole, the
material is thoughtful and carefully thought-through, but never quite rises to
the level of profundity, perhaps because the music helps elucidate the emotions
behind the words but never really manages to deepen or enlarge upon those
feelings.
Matthew Burtner’s The Ceiling Floats Away,
heard in a Ravello recording, is – to an even greater extent than the material
from Skylark Vocal Ensemble and the Shakespeare Concert Series – a
you-had-to-be-there work. Using poetry by Rita Dove, Burtner here produces a
setting that employs a mixture of instruments (flute, clarinet, cello and
piano) with technologically motivated and enhanced sound. Software called “Nomads”
is used by the audience, through mobile devices, to provide the performers –
and the listeners to this CD – with thoughts and responses to the 13 composed
movements of the work. This is electronic audience participation taken to its
logical extreme, but by definition it bypasses the audience hearing this
recording, which therefore receives only part of Burtner’s creation – or only
one version of it, much as occurs when listening to a recorded version of
aleatoric music that locks in a single version that will never be repeated and
that thus runs counter to the notion of aleatory in the first place. There is
very little to say, really, about what is heard here: The Ceiling Floats Away
sounds like many other contemporary experimental works in the way Burtner
handles the words and the extrusions and intrusions of the instruments. The
alternating “audience creation bridge” passages add nothing significant to
Burtner’s own material, and the whole disc, most of whose tracks run only about
a minute and whose totality is just 38 minutes or so, seems much, much longer. This
is decidedly a case in which being present for a performance is really
necessary to participate fully in it. Burtner’s created material for The
Ceiling Floats Away is designed only as part of an experience, and it is the
shared experience – including the audience contributing what passes for
creativity of its own, rather than accepting the passivity of absorption of
material presented to it – that is the whole reason for being of Burtner’s
work. Without the chance to be a participant, a listener will likely find that
Burtner’s creation loses whatever level of involvement it would have in the
setting of a live performance.
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