Music for Solo Horn. Johanna Lundy, horn; Ellen Chamberlain, violin; Sarah Toy, viola;
Robert Chamberlain, cello. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Bassoon Unbounded: 21st Century Music for Bassoon and
Piano.
Christin Schillinger, bassoon; Jed Moss, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Jean-François Charles: Electroclarinet 1-6; Lina. Jean-François Charles, clarinets. JFC.
$15.99.
As showcases for instruments that are not
usually thought of as “showcase instruments” – that is, ones heard far less
often in a front-and-center role than violin or piano – these two MSR Classics
CDs give performers plenty of chances to show the breadth and depth of their
instruments and the types of pieces designed to highlight their technique. Not
all the works are filled with virtuosity, but some certainly are. The first
piece on Johanna Lundy’s CD, Interstellar Call (from Des canyons aux étoiles…)
by Messiaen, is intended to reflect some of the natural majesty of the United
States but is notable mostly for the extreme demands it places on the
performer, from glissandos to passages where the keys must be kept half-closed.
Lundy’s ability to surmount the technical issues and make the music sound
communicative is quite an accomplishment, even if what the piece communicates is not particularly notable. Next on
the disc is Fantasy Pieces by Jay
Vosk (born 1948), one of three world première
recordings here. In this work, the horn’s sound is considerably more
traditional, although Vosk, like Messiaen, tries to use it to express feelings
about American natural beauty. Concert Étude by
Finnish conductor and composer Esa-Pekka Salonen (born 1958) has some
attractively playful melodies and rhythms: it sounds less serious than the
Messiaen and Vosk works, although it is scarcely frivolous. Next comes the
longest and most interesting work on the disc, as well as the oldest: Bach’s Partita in A minor, BWV 1013, in Lundy’s
adaptation of an arrangement by Michel Rondeau. This work was originally designed to display the
virtuosity of the transverse flute, and thus might be expected to sit rather
uneasily on the horn – certainly the natural horn of Bach’s time could not have
managed it. But Lundy handles the piece with sensitivity and skill, and with considerable
emotion in the Sarabande – not,
perhaps, a particularly historically informed performance, but one that
connects emotionally in a way that the horn is particularly capable of doing. Any
work following this one would be a bit of a letdown, which is the fate of Night Storm by Dan Coleman (born 1972),
another world première recording. Inspired by Walt Whitman’s “Proud Music of
the Storm,” the piece moves in strong bursts alternating with sustained
passages, and while the sound and fury are there, what it all signifies is rather
modest – although the conclusion, in the horn’s very lowest register, is
impressive both in sound and in Lundy’s playing. The Bach might better have
been followed by the next work on the CD, Laudatio
by Bernhard Kroll (1920-2013), which was inspired by the hymn Te Deum Laudamus and effectively
presents a series of emotional touchstones. Kroll’s piece is followed by Sea Eagle by Sir Peter Maxwell Davies
(1944-2016), a tone painting celebrating a bird that was reintroduced to an
island off Scotland. The work has a thrilling and exceptionally difficult
concluding Molto presto that Lundy
takes in a single breath – a genuinely breathtaking achievement. This would
have been a wonderful ending for the disc, but there is one more piece, the
final world première recording. It is Canyon
Songs for horn and strings, by Pamela Decker (born 1955). It is actually
this particular arrangement, which dates to 2017, that has not been recorded
before; and it is nicely done, with an overall feeling of meditative peace that
contrasts in pretty much every way with the conclusion of Davies’ work. In this
context, though, it seems rather pale and wan, yet another celebration of natural
beauty whose intended expressions about the wonder of creation are
comparatively straightforward – although, as with everything here, played with
sensitivity and tremendous skill.
All seven bassoon-and-piano works
performed by Christin Schillinger and Jed Moss are world premières, and the
intent of this CD is as much to put the composers in the limelight as to focus
on the bassoon’s capabilities in contemporary music. This is not an entirely
happy approach, because the works, while pleasant and well-made enough, are by
and large not especially distinguished, while Schillinger’s performance
abilities are sufficiently impressive to entice listeners into wanting to hear
her cut loose in some music that is less self-consciously modern than are many of
these pieces. The disc opens with Three
Miniatures for Bassoon and Piano by Michael Van Bebber (born 1976): works
of about a minute each that are unsurprising harmonically and rhythmically.
Next is Double Helix by Jenni Brandon
(born 1977), which blends and contrasts bassoon and piano more effectively and
to better effect, but has less to say than its five-movement structure would
seem to indicate. Diaphonic by Kyle
Hovatter (born 1986) is for bassoon and tape and is just one of innumerable
pieces in which composers merge acoustic and electronic sounds without really
enhancing either. Swing Shift by
Adrienne Albert (born 1941) is considerably more interesting, including
percussion as well as bassoon and piano and proceeding through a pleasantly
jazzy sonic landscape. Three Night Pieces
by Damian Montano (born 1976) is the longest work here – its three sections run
17 minutes – and has some moments of effective tone-painting, notably in the
second movement (“Mysterious Elixir”). But it overstays its welcome, especially
in the outer movements, which initially make their points effectively but
insist on returning to them again and again. Victoria Rooms by Geoffrey Burch (born 1979) is designated as being
“for improvised bassoon and tape,” and this presumably gives it an extra dose
of contemporary flair, but it just sounds overdone and rather silly in a kind
of Grade B horror-movie way. The disc ends with Goodbye, Old Paint by John Steinmetz (born 1951), which draws on a
cowboy song of the American West and has a suitably folksy and rather
old-fashioned feeling about it. Schillinger’s talent is substantial, as is her
artistry; and she apparently feels drawn to the works here out of a commitment
to bring contemporary composers and their music to a wider audience. That is
all well and good, when the music is sufficiently worthy – but by and large,
the pieces here are not special enough in sound or structure to tempt listeners
to seek out more works by the same people. The audience will, however, likely
be interested in hearing more performances by Schillinger, hopefully in repertoire
that allows her to display her prowess while it better engages listeners’ interest.
The situation involving a new CD featuring
performances by clarinetist Jean-François Charles is somewhat analogous, except
that in this case, Charles is both composer and performer. The reaction of
listeners who are not already deeply committed to the form and sound of the
music here, however, is likely to be similar to that of listeners who hear
Schillinger’s excellent playing: it would be good to hear Charles in
somewhat more-forgiving and
more-engaging repertoire. It is possible to understand the motivation for music
composed as Charles has composed the works on this disc, and even to admire the
skill with which the material has been created and put together, without
necessarily liking the end product very much. The issue of the genuinely
unpleasant sound of some of these works is especially acute because the
inherent sound of the clarinet is so beautiful. Charles mixes live electronics
with his clarinets in such a way as to give the overall impression – to modify
a comment made by Hans von Bülow about Brahms’ Violin Concerto – that Charles
is composing not for the clarinet but
against it. The first Electroclarinet is for B-flat clarinet,
the second for contrabass clarinet, the third for basset horn, the fourth for
E-flat clarinet, the fifth for clarinet in A, the sixth for bass clarinet, and Lina is for contrabass clarinet (and is
the only piece on the CD that does not include live electronics). As in the
works of John Cage, these pieces by Charles seem designed to extend the
definition of music to include pretty much everything that a listener may hear
while attending and ostensibly paying attention to a concert or recital. The
physical sound of the clarinets’ keys, the breaths taken by Charles during
performances, and of course the multiplicity of the usual electronic yawps and
screeches and outbursts – all these are part of the “musical experience” here.
So are the quite obvious attempts to push the instruments beyond what could be
described as their (not just the audience’s) comfort zone: for example, near
the end of Lina, it actually sounds
as if the instrument is being strangled by a rather inept executioner (it is
interesting to compare the sound here with that at the end of the “March to the
Scaffold” in Berlioz’ Symphonie
fantastique). Charles describes several of the Electroclarinet pieces as homages – to Debussy, Weber, Messiaen,
and Stravinsky – but whether the audience (as opposed to Charles himself) will
pick up any sense of tribute is doubtful. A great deal of focus in contemporary
music is to bring listeners sounds that they have not heard before, using
nontraditional methods (especially computers and other forms of electronics) to
accomplish what Charles Ives said more than a century ago, to create music that
should “stretch the ears.” But there is a certain point at which what is being
heard is no longer music but a concatenation of sounds. Indeed, some of Ives’
own music was accused of being just that – but Ives was never trying to force an audience to
reconsider what “music” is, any more than, say, Edgard Varèse was. It was Cage
who insisted on that reconsideration, and composers such as Charles have continued
to insist on it. Some audiences will surely thrive on aural experiences along
the lines of the one offered on Charles’ disc, but others can surely be
forgiven for wishing they could hear Charles’ obviously very considerable
performance skill employed in the service of pieces that work with the
clarinet’s inherent warmth and melodiousness rather than so very determinedly
against them.
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