Frank Ticheli: Clarinet Concerto; Brad Warnaar:
Horn Concerto; Behzad Ranjbaran: Flute Concerto. James Zimmermann,
clarinet; Leslie Norton, horn; Érik Gratton, flute; Nashville Symphony
conducted by Giancarlo Guerrero. Naxos. $12.99.
Timothy Lee Miller: Sebastian’s Day Off; Ruby in
the Rough; Dear Della Mae; Inky & Marie; Stellee & Jack; Boo’s Bolero;
Poochie’s Waltz; Something More. Ansonica. $14.99.
Alejandro Rutty: Exhaling Space; Transparent Sun;
As You Say; Martian Milonga; More Music for Examining and Buying Merchandise;
Guitars; Cantabile Hop; Qualia. Navona. $14.99.
It was Mozart who first established a
significant degree of independence for wind instruments in a larger ensemble,
picking up on some moves in that direction by Haydn. Centuries later, it was
jazz that placed wind instruments – certain ones, anyway – in the forefront of
mixed instrumental groups. Today, composers often draw on both the classical
tradition and the jazz world in creating works in which winds are highly
prominent, even front-and-center, but remain within the context of instruments
of other types. Some contemporary composers do this with a conscious nod to the
past. Frank Ticheli (born 1958) quite overtly ties the first movement of his Clarinet Concerto (2010) to Gershwin,
calling the movement “Rhapsody for George” and quoting Gershwin’s own famous
clarinet solo at the start – then moving onward from it into a distinctly
jazzy, highly syncopated movement that is speedy and high-spirited. The second and
third movements of Ticheli’s work also look backward: “Song for Aaron” is
distinctly Coplandesque, while the concluding “Riffs for Lenny” focuses on the
multifaceted Leonard Bernstein through additional jazz-inflected music that
merges underlying seriousness with bright, dancelike elements. Brad Warnaar
(born 1950) looks to the past as well in his Horn Concerto (2015) – specifically, in the final movement, which
is the work’s cleverest and most interesting. Here Warnaar takes the
soloist-vs.-orchestra concept to an amusing level by having the ensemble
quoting horn works by Brahms and Mozart, the soloist responding with quotations
from Richard Strauss, and everyone eventually reconciling for a happy ending.
This concerto is interestingly constructed from a technical standpoint, using
only the piano’s white keys (the diatonic scale) for its notes; but it is a bit
too intricate for its own good, introducing “bell” motifs as place markers,
pushing the horn to the extremes of its range, and having a generally disjointed
feeling. In contrast, Iranian native Behzad Ranjbaran (born 1955) looks for a
Persian feeling in his Flute Concerto
(2013), seeking sensuousness and warmth through a three-movement work in which
21 of the 27 minutes are slow. The piece does not actually sound especially
“Persian” or otherwise exotic, and although there is lyricism and even poetry
here, there is rather too much of both, with the result that the bright and
distinctly bouncy finale comes across as a real relief. The three wind soloists
heard on the CD are Nashville Symphony principals, and the orchestra backs them
up in very fine style under principal conductor Giancarlo Guerrero. No music
here really breaks new ground, but all the works have elements that players of
the solo instruments – and listeners who enjoy those instruments’ sounds – will
appreciate.
The eight works on an Ansonica CD of the
music of Timothy Lee Miller, although written for a variety of different
instruments, all share a focus on winds and a very strong jazz orientation.
They also share important personal elements, being based on people and events
in the composer’s life – an arrangement that gives them highly personal meaning
for him and those who know him, but that requires listeners unacquainted with
Miller to do some homework if they are to understand what he is trying to evoke
in the various pieces. Several of the works memorialize specific individuals:
Miller’s Aunt Ruby (Ruby in the Rough),
his Aunt Della Mae (Dear Della Mae),
his Aunt Marie and her dog (Inky &
Marie), his Aunt Estelle and the stories she told (Stellee & Jack), and his Aunt Mary Lou and her nickname (Boo’s Bolero). The other pieces are
tributes to people still living, including Miller’s son (Sebastian’s Day Off), his mother (Poochie’s Waltz), and his wife (Something
More). So the CD as a whole is a musical family album – an attractive
concept that is of necessity highly personal, which means it is rather insular:
nothing in any of this music reaches out in any especially distinctive way to
people who are not Miller’s family members or close friends. That does not mean
the music is poorly constructed, because it is not: the quick shifts in Sebastian’s Day Off, the unusual 13-8
meter of Dear Della Mae, the
gentleness of three-quarter time in Poochie’s
Waltz, and various other elements of these works are effective and
involving. And the various blendings of saxophones (at least one in every work)
with instruments including trumpet, trombone, guitar, piano, bass and drums are
nicely managed. However, in the absence of familiarity with the individuals for
or about whom the works were written, a listener ends up with a feeling of
comparative sameness of sound from one piece to the next, rather than a sense
that a specific work here somehow limns a particular personality.
The type of music written by Alejandro
Rutty and heard on a new Navona CD is far more varied, and so are the
instruments Rutty uses. Not all his works here include winds, and indeed not
all include traditional acoustic instruments: More Music for Examining and Buying Merchandise is for soprano
saxophone, yes, but also for electronics, while Guitars is for two clarinets and electronics and conflates the acoustic
instruments with those of the work’s title, to rather odd effect. Rutty does
not always go for the obvious: Exhaling
Space deals with celestial bodies but uses a string quartet rather than the
electronics commonly employed in “space music,” and although Martian Milonga – an imaginary “future
of tango” work – does include electric bass and does have some of the feelings
of electronic music, it is really a blend of tango with world music and rock. The
four other works here are Transparent
Sun, for violin and piano; As You
Say, for two violins and soprano saxophone; Cantabile Hop, for piano, viola, bass (played by Rutty), percussion
and electronics; and Qualia, a
solo-piano work and another piece performed by Rutty himself. Rutty’s stylistic
variety can be jarring – he packs a great deal into a short time – and although
his work is mainly jazz-permeated, it also has elements of Latin music (tango
and otherwise), straightforward electronica, and some classical elements
(albeit often stretched almost into unrecognizability). Rutty does tend to let
his own cleverness run away with itself from time to time, and several tracks
on the disc are less interesting to hear than their titles and instrumentation
would indicate. But the sheer variety of material on the disc means that many
listeners who enjoy contemporary music will find at least a few pieces here
worth hearing, and may even enjoy choosing works based partly on whether their
focus is winds, strings, percussion, electronics or some combination of these instruments
and their varied sounds.
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