Russian Trumpet Sonatas—Music by Yuri Mikhailovich Chichkov, Nikolai Ivanovich
Platonov, Yuri Mikhailovich Aleksandrov, Mark Vladimirovich Milman, Leonid
Zinovievich Lyubovsky, Gherman Grigorievich Okunev, Alexander Ivanovich Baryshev,
and Aida Petrovna Isakova. Iskander
Akhmadullin, trumpet; Natalia Bolshakova, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
New Music for Clarinet and Piano by Emily Rutherford,
Conor Abbott Brown, David Mullikin, Andrew Halladay, and Greg Simon. Kellan Toohey, clarinet;
Suyeon Kim, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Stephen Yip: Chamber Music. Navona. $14.99.
The tremendous abundance of under-explored
chamber music, especially from the 20th and 21st
centuries, makes it possible for listeners to hear an ever-more-extended series
of world première recordings of material that is quite interesting even if
perhaps not so distinctive or memorable as to merit regular inclusion in
recitals. Performers, though, may find these works especially interesting as possible
additions to their own programs: so many unknown or little-known pieces are
challenging to play but written to lie well on the instruments for which they
were created that anyone playing those instruments may find all sorts of new
and previously unexplored repertoire on recordings that explore some of the
byways of more-recent chamber composition. That is certainly the case with the
MSR Classics release of no fewer than eight well-made, interesting and often
genuinely intriguing 20th-century sonatas for trumpet and piano that
were composed during the Soviet era. The composers’ names will be largely
interchangeable to most listeners and, in truth, so will much of the music,
which – certainly in the pieces written until the mid-1960s – seems consciously
created to comply with the notorious Zhdanov Doctrine of 1946 and 1948, which
demanded adherence to “Socialist realism” in music and in particular forbade
“misuse” of dissonance. Although the doctrine officially ended with Stalin’s
death in 1953, its effects continued to burble through Soviet society for some
time thereafter. They are apparent in the careful construction and the
moderation of dissonant elements in Chichkov’s single-movement Sonatina for Trumpet and Piano (1950),
heard here in a transposition to G made by trumpeter Iskander Akhmadullin; in Platonov’s and
Milman’s sonatas from 1962, the former in three movements and the latter in
one; in Aleksandrov’s three-movement sonata from 1964, here recorded for the
first time in its original trumpet-and-piano version; and even, to a lesser
extent, in the three-movement sonata by Lyubovsky from 1969. By the late 1960s,
however, the binding of “Socialist realism” to music had begun to fray, and the
willingness to embrace previously anathematized Western influences began to
increase. One work here from 1970 offers clear evidence of the transition:
Baryshev’s Sonatina in the Russian Style
has three movements that, on the one hand, are strongly focused on native
Russian material (the titles are “Folk-tunes,” “Long-drawn Song” and “Buffoon
Song”) and therefore directly in line with Zhdanov’s and Stalin’s demands, but
on the other hand treat the material far more freely and with far greater
“Westernization” than would have been tolerated in the 1950 and into the 1960s.
The remaining two pieces seem comfortable with being thoroughly Russian but not
slavishly so. They are Okunev’s three-movement sonatina from 1970 and Isakova’s
three-movement sonata from 1986. Every piece here shows its composer handling
the interplay of trumpet and piano with care and a strong sense of the brass
instrument’s capabilities, and Akhmadullin and Natalia Bolshakova play all the
music idiomatically, stylishly and, indeed, with considerable élan. The CD is a
bit much to take in at a single hearing, since its generous hour-and-a-quarter
of music makes the similarities among the works clearer than the differences
among them. But heard one or two at a time, these very-little-known pieces
offer considerable listening enjoyment.
The world-première clarinet-and-piano
works on another new MSR Classics CD are more easily heard straight through,
possibly just because of the clarinet’s more-mellow-than-the-trumpet sound and
possibly because of the five composers’ differing sensibilities. Emily
Rutherford (born 1993) offers Three Poems
that are truly poetic and warm, despite considerable rhythmic complexity:
although written as recently as 2012, this is a work that harks back in its emotional
language to much earlier music, although its melodic structure means it would
be a stretch to call it neo-Romantic. Early
Winter Spires (2013) by Conor Abbott Brown (born 1988) is a portrayal of a
Colorado mountain peak – the entire disc is focused on Colorado and titled
“Scenes from Home” – and features a clear climbing motif that reaches a summit
and then descends rapidly. Suite Antique
(2016) by David Mullikin (born 1950) is a deliberate throwback, a five-movement
Baroque-style suite whose highlights are a moving penultimate “Lament” and a
bright and bouncy finale. Five Scenes
from Our Aspen Grove (2008) by Andrew Halladay (born 1982) is a bit of a
throwback, too, not so much in form as in content: it is intended as a
through-the-seasons musical journey that at the same time reflects human love
and loss – a bit too much weight for the rather slight piece to carry
effectively, although the scoring for clarinet is particularly attractive.
Finally, Two Orchids (2015) by Greg
Simon (born 1985) is another attempt to parallel something in nature with
something in human experience – here, the transplantation of an orchid with
Simon’s own move away from Colorado. The nostalgia in the middle and calm at
the end are clear emotional touchstones, but the intensity of other sections is
rather overdone – although, again, the writing for clarinet is effective.
Kellan Toohey and Suyeon Kim are an excellent performing pair for all the
works, playing them with fine attention to the subtleties of the music and a
willingness to explore all the emotional highs and lows of every piece on the
disc.
The emotions expressed musically by
Stephen Yip on a new Navona release are in several instances put across through
instrumental combinations or techniques that are unusual by the standards of
Western chamber music. Two of the six works on the disc are for solo
instruments and show what is unexpected about the CD quite clearly. Whispering Fragrance (2017) is for solo
violin (played by Yu-Fang Chen), while Ran
(2014) is for the Chinese zither known as the guzheng (played by Jiuan-Reng
Yeh). Both the works strain the capabilities of their respective solo
instruments in ways that are characteristic of Yip’s style: the violin is
required to play high partial natural harmonics and the guzheng’s wood is
struck percussively, for example. There is an ethereality to both works and,
indeed, to all the music on the CD, whatever its instrumentation. Thus, Ding (2015), for double bass (Henry
Chen) and guzheng (Yu-Chen Wang), has nine short sections representing nine
ancient rulers, but its sound world is much the same as that of the other pieces
here. The three remaining works use exclusively Western instruments but retain
Eastern sensibilities – for instance, Tranquility
in Consonance (2016) is for flute (Izumi Miyahara), saxophone (Masahito
Sugihara), bassoon (Ben Roidl-Ward), and piano (Andrew Schneider), but the
instruments are played using some Chinese techniques that are intended to bring
forth the same focus on natural sounds that would be evoked by traditional
Chinese instruments. Also here are the mostly tranquil In Seventh Heaven (2014) for saxophone (Daniel Gelok), double bass
(Rudy Michael Albach), and piano (Schneider); and the deliberately repetitious
and partially aleatoric Peace of Mind
(2014) for bass and B-flat clarinet (Rik De Geyter), baritone and alto saxophone
(Peter Verdonck), and piano (Ward De Vleeschhouwer). The instrumentation and
techniques may differ from piece to piece, but the overall effect of all Yip’s
music is pretty much the same: it is generally calm and collected, not quite
minimalist but certainly not exuberant, contemplative without ever quite
becoming profound. Listeners who like any of the pieces on this disc will
likely enjoy all of them.
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