Mozart: L’Oca del Cairo; Lo Sposo Deluso; Aria in
C, “Chi sà, qual sia”; Quartet in E-flat, “Dite almeno.” Ensemble and Orchestra of
the Kameropera Antwerpen TRANSPARANT conducted by Hans Rotman. CPO. $16.99.
Andreas Romberg: Symphony No. 4, “Alla turca”;
Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 5, “Turkish”; Haydn: Overture to “L’Incontro
improvviso.”
Julia Schröder, violin; Collegium Musicum Basel conducted by Kevin Griffiths.
CPO. $16.99.
Khachaturian: Piano Concerto; Concerto-Rhapsody for
Piano and Orchestra. Stepan Simonian, piano; Staatsorchester Rheinische Philharmonie
conducted by Daniel Raiskin. CPO. $16.99.
Joseph Sheehan: Songs of Lake Volta—Ghanaian
Traditional Music Reimagined. Kinetic (Anqwenique Wingfield, voice; Anthony
Ambroso, guitar; Joseph Sheehan, piano; Jason Rafalak, bass; Ryan Socrates,
drums) and Kassia Ensemble (Dawn Posey, Ashley Freeburn and Maureen Conlon,
violins; Si Yu, viola; Katya Janpoladyan, cello). Ansonica. $14.99.
Mozart aficionados and scholars are well
aware that the composer left a number of works incomplete and contributed his
music to material written primarily by others, as was the custom in his time.
This is why the Mozart symphonic canon skips from No. 36 to No. 38: Symphony
No. 37, K. 444, is actually by Mozart’s friend Michael Haydn, with just a bit
of Mozart’s own music in it. On the operatic front, Mozart’s contributions to
works by others are even more common, and can be very enjoyable to hear both as
rarities and as worthy pieces in their own right. Furthermore, Mozart’s own
incomplete musical projects can be delightful even if, in the case of stage
works, they are too fragmentary to be visually performable on their own. That
is the case with two Italian opera fragments from 1783-84, L’Oca del Cairo and Lo Sposo
Deluso. There is an hour of Mozart between them – an hour of Mozartiana
that many listeners have never heard – and some of the material is quite
delightful. Add a couple of items created by Mozart for inclusion in stage
works by other composers and you have, in the totality of a CPO release of
material recorded back in 1991, exotic pleasures that nevertheless have a
familiar ring to them. Essentially the complete libretto of L’Oca del Cairo (“The Cairo Goose”) has
survived, and it shows why Mozart abandoned the project: the material is by
Giovanni Battista Varesco, librettist of Idomeneo,
whose work Mozart did not like – justifiably, in this case, since the comedy
has a silly ending that parodies the Trojan Horse by having a man winning his
bride by being smuggled to her inside a mechanical goose. About 40 minutes of
Mozart’s music for the project survives. It is performed stylishly under Hans
Rotman’s direction, and there are actually a couple of items worth more-frequent
hearing, notably an aria-plus-terzetto, Siano
pronte alle gran nozze. For Lo sposo
deluso (“The Deluded Bridegroom”), even less music has survived: about 20
minutes, all from Act I. Here the libretto is just possibly by Lorenzo da
Ponte, but is more likely by the undistinguished Giuseppe Petrosellini, who is
also thought to have written the libretto for La finta giardiniera. The words were apparently originally written
for Domenico Cimarosa. In this case, Mozart wrote for seven very specific
singers, tailoring his music to their strengths. The reason Mozart abandoned
this project is uncertain; the extant music includes a well-balanced overture
with peppy elements contrasting with pensive ones, plus a particularly nice
quartet, Ah, ah che ridere! The remaining
Mozart material on this CD is a pair of inserts for other composers’ operas. Chi sà, qual sia is an aria for Il bubero di buon cuore by Vicente
Martin y Soler (1754-1806), and Dite al
meno is a quartet for La villanella rapita
by Francesco Bianchi (1752-1810). They are slight pieces written for specific
singers and are intended to supplement the other composers’ material, not to
distract from their work – but it is notable that the text for the Martin y
Soler insert is certainly by da Ponte, the greatest of Mozart’s librettists. CPO
provides plot summaries for the two fragmentary Mozart operas and explanatory
contextual information for the two inserts – and, wonder of wonders, gives all
the texts, a huge help for material as little-known as this even though nothing
is translated from the original Italian. Anyone fascinated by Mozart’s operatic
productions or simply interested in hearing some of his very-little-known music
will find this disc a distinct pleasure, if a rather rarefied one.
Mozart’s own sense of the exotic, and that
of other composers of his time, tended toward the Turkish. Beethoven was so
enamored of Turkish-style sounds that he produced a Turkish march for The Ruins of Athens that remains very
often heard, and also famously (and rather incongruously) included a Turkish
march in the middle of the finale of his Symphony No. 9. Gluck and Haydn were
fond of the exoticism of Turkish-style rhythms and instruments, too – and an
example of Haydn’s use of them, in the overture to L’Incontro improvviso, appears on a new CPO release conducted by
Kevin Griffiths. The work’s plot revolves around a Persian princess and an
Ottoman prince, so the sounds Haydn includes flow naturally from the narrative.
But the Turkish influence is more apparent in Mozart’s music than in that of
Haydn or Beethoven. From the famous concluding Rondo alla turca of his Piano Sonata No. 11, K. 331, to the
entirety of The Abduction from the
Seraglio, Mozart employed elements that were considered traditionally
Turkish (as they sounded to Viennese ears), and did so to exceptionally fine
effect. His final violin concerto, No. 5 in A, K. 219, shows another of his
uses of Turkish rhythms: here they interrupt an otherwise delicate finale just
as surprisingly as, 50 years later, Beethoven’s Turkish material interrupts
(or, rather, changes) the flow of the conclusion of his last symphony. Julia
Schröder does a fine job of placing the Mozart concerto’s Turkish elements in
context: the concerto is actually filled with clever and surprising twists of
various types. But the most interesting use of Turkish-style material on this
disc comes in the fourth and last symphony published during the lifetime of the
very-little-known Andreas Romberg (1767-1821), who wrote 10 symphonies in all.
The Sinfonia alla turca – that is its
formal title – was written in 1798. It is highly unusual for its time in
incorporating Turkish elements (through use of piccolo as well as cymbal,
triangle and bass drum) throughout, not just to produce a touch of color in a
specific movement or section. Romberg, in his time a distinguished violinist,
treats the strings particularly well in the not-very-slow slow movement, Andante quasi Allegretto, but elsewhere
the “Turkish-ness” of the instrumentation is juxtaposed with Classical-era
thematic material again and again. The finale, in particular, is simply
overflowing with percussion, and it features the same contrasts of loud and
soft sections – and the same brief rather than extended themes – as Mozart
presents in The Abduction from the
Seraglio, in a movement whose structure and sound are distinctly
Haydnesque. The symphony is a treat for the ears, and this disc as a whole is
fascinating for showing, to a greater extent than usual, just how popular the
“Turkish sound” was as an attention-getting device in the Classical era.
Another new CPO recording offers exoticism
of a different sort in two piano-and-orchestra works by Aram Khachaturian
(1903-1978). Although Khachaturian moved to Moscow at the age of 19, he
retained his Armenian roots and expressed them effectively throughout his
musical life. Thus, for example, the second movement of his Piano Concerto is based on a
well-known-in-the-region folk song that Khachaturian said he once heard in
Tiflis. But Khachaturian so manipulates and varies the simple tune that he
produces an elaborate 10-minute movement that feels only vaguely folklike. At
other times, Khachaturian creates tunes that sound as if they are folk
melodies, when in fact they are not: he is simply channeling his perceptions of
the Trans-Caucasus area in a way that produces material that sounds as if it
could have come from there, even though it did not. The concerto dates to 1937,
years before the ballets Gayane and Spartacus, for which Khachaturian is
nowadays best known. The Concerto-Rhapsody
is much later, composed in 1967, and tends to be tarred in the West with its
avowed purpose of celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Bolshevik
Revolution of October 1917. Years after the disintegration of the Soviet Union,
however, this work – the last of a trio of rhapsodies for solo instruments and
orchestra, the first two being for violin and for cello – is easier to hear on
its own merits, which turn out to be considerable. The writing also proves to
be surprisingly avant-garde for a piece avowedly expressing the triumph of
Leninism and the “socialist realism” that Soviet rulers and their musical
enforcers expected and demanded. A four-note motif of the Concerto-Rhapsody duplicates one in the Piano Concerto, and both pieces end in essentially the same way. But
otherwise the later work is exotic in an entirely different manner – for
example, through its level of dissonance and the way in which Khachaturian
drops markedly and unexpectedly from a highly percussion-laden section marked ffff (!) to one where delicacy prevails
and the vibraphone dominates. The confluence and contrast of the extremely
martial with the delicately lyrical give this work, whatever its political
intentions and designs may have been, a sound and style that transcend the time
and circumstances under which Khachaturian created it. Stepan Simonian’s
intense devotion to the piano parts of both works is evident throughout, and
the performances by the Staatsorchester Rheinische Philharmonie under Daniel
Raiskin sound assured, idiomatic and as intense and colorful as the music
demands – which is to say, very much so.
The composers of the 21st
century often find their exotic touches not in places from which they came but
in ones where they are foreigners, as Joseph Sheehan shows on a new (+++)
release from Ansonica. Sheehan, like many other composers today, mixes jazz and
classical elements in much of his music, and also draws heavily on non-Western
musical traditions. Songs of Lake Volta
specifically reaches out to, and from, the music of Ghana, a nation where
Sheehan says he had a life-changing experience in 2008 and a place that he has
since visited several times. Sheehan’s own performing ensemble, Kinetic, is
joined on the CD by the Kassia Ensemble, and both groups pay tribute in their
performances to many of the “cause” elements of which contemporary composers
are fond. Vocalist Anqwenique Wingfield sings in indigenous languages of Ghana
and in multiple styles, the idea being to emphasize Ghana’s ethnic variety and
diversity and hold the nation and its music up as worthy of emulation as well
as admiration. There are tracks here of mainly quiet dissonance, such as Akoo Kofi and Oye; ones with a distinctly chant-like, declamatory basis, such as Damba Suite; and ones where jazziness
comes to the fore, such as Subo and Dusime. Each of the nine tracks – the
others are called Nyento, Confornoche,
Kekele and Dama Dama – creates
its own little sound world and explores it with the resources of the performing
ensembles. Texts for the songs are provided, along with translations, giving
listeners a chance to follow the unfamiliar verbalizing and sense the extent to
which the music enhances, parallels or comments on the words. The sense of the
exotic is palpable here, as is the determination to treat the material in a
highly respectful manner and pay tribute to the culture that produced the
underlying music – while interpreting the foundational melodies through a
primarily Western and heavily jazz-influenced sound palette. A clear example of
genre mixing, Songs of Lake Volta
will appeal to listeners with a strong interest in the merging of cultures for
the sake of enhancing artistic expression and, hopefully, increased mutual
understanding and respect.
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