Mozart: Symphonies Nos. 39-41. Ensemble Appassionato
conducted by Mathieu Herzog. Naïve. $24.99 (2 CDs).
Perpetual Twilight. The Choral Scholars of
University College Dublin conducted by Desmond Earley. Signum Classics. $17.99.
Mark Dal Porto: Song of Eternity; I Seek Rest for
My Lonely Heart; When Your Song Rang Out to Me; Romance for Oboe and Piano;
Spring, the Sweet Spring; Exotic Animals Suite; Mystic Mountain. Moravian Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by Petr Vronský; Vox Futura conducted by Andrew Shenton;
Tracy Carr, oboe; Mark Dal Porto, piano; Arcadian Winds (Vanessa Holroyd,
flute; Jane Harrison, oboe; Rane Moore, clarinet; Fred Aldrich, horn; Janet
Underhill, bassoon). Navona. $14.99.
Frederic D’Haene: Music with Silent Aitake’s. Reigakusha Gagaku Ensemble
and Ensemble Modern conducted by Kasper De Roo. Ravello. $14.99.
David Rosenboom: Deviant Resonances—Live Electronic
Music with Instruments, Voices & Brains. Ravello. $14.99 (2 CDs).
The emotional intensity brought to their
music by certain composers – think Mahler for an obvious example – is only one
aspect of the passionate way in which music and music-makers connect with
audiences. Performers, after all, are as much a part of the musical experience
as the works they perform, which is ultimately what interpretation is all
about. This is scarcely a new observation, but every once in a while, a
recording comes along that so clearly exemplifies the music-as-passion model
that it demonstrates with unusual force just how important performers are in
connecting composers and their intentions with audiences. The extraordinary and
sure-to-be-controversial interpretations of Mozart’s last three symphonies by
Mathieu Herzog and Ensemble Appassionato on a new Naïve recording fit this
model well. This chamber-sized group presents Mozart in a way that is as far as
possible from what listeners will likely expect from a small ensemble. This is
in-your-face Mozart, intense and, yes, passionate to such a degree that the
composer seems to have been nearly as much a Romantic as, say, Schubert. It is
a fair bet that few listeners will ever have heard these symphonies sound this
way. For one thing, the performances are fast, often very fast – but that in
itself has no more meaning than saying, for example, that Toscanini’s
performances were fast. The statement is true, but what matters is why the speed, not that the speed exists. There is nothing capricious in the way
Herzog drives this music – and he does drive it, to such an extent that only an
extraordinary group of musicians like this one could possibly keep up with the
pacing while articulating the works with such clarity and style. It is not Mozart’s style – these should not be
confused with period performances, and they are certainly not stately or
courtly readings. But because the music is already so well-known, the drive and
speed of these performances prove revelatory of elements of Mozart’s thinking
that rarely, if ever, come to the fore. The handling of each symphony’s first and
third movements is particularly telling. The first movements dash headlong into
the audience’s consciousness, insisting through their propulsiveness that these
symphonies have something important to say and are going to drive their points
home. The third movements are, in effect, split in two, with the main Menuetto settings as driven as anything
by Bruckner and then coming to a screeching halt for the Trio portions – which are taken much more slowly, almost like
additional slow movements within each symphony’s structure. The slow second
movements of all three symphonies are less emotive than in other performances:
this is a set that shows its Romantic inclinations through extensive rubato and considerable freedom of
pacing, not through inappropriate slow-movement swooning. As for the finales,
each gets its own approach: very fleet and light in No. 39, exceptionally
intense and dark in No. 40, and played at such breakneck speed in No. 41 that
if Jupiter is listening, his ears will be ringing. Yet there is such precision
in all the playing that the music’s lines are clear throughout, the interplay
of themes (including inner voices) comes through to excellent effect, and the
chamber-ensemble-like sound serves as anodyne for the highly unconventional
pacing and overall interpretative excesses. These should not be the
first-choice recordings of these symphonies for anybody – but they are, in
their own way, so revelatory and so flat-out unusual that the more familiar
listeners are with the music, the more their ears will be opened by hearing the
way Herzog and Ensemble Appassionato perform it.
The passion is somewhat more controlled,
and used for different purposes, by The
Choral Scholars of University College Dublin under Desmond Earley on a new
Signum Classics release. There are 14 tracks here, mixing new choral music with
arrangements of traditional Scottish and Irish folk material, everything
written or arranged to allow the crystal-clear sound and intonation of the
chorus to come through consistently. Instrumental touches – strings here, woodwind
there, percussion elsewhere – set off the vocal material exceptionally well,
and the voices sound committed and strongly involved with the material
throughout, although never through over-emoting. Some of the tracks are quite
extended: Earley’s Body of the Moon
runs nearly eight minutes, and Bill Whelan’s Elegy lasts six-and-a-half. But there is no sense of musical or
artistic padding anywhere here: each song grows and flows naturally and lasts
just as long as it should. The massed-voice beauties of Timothy Stephens’ At That Hour When All Things Have Repose,
the bounce of Earley’s arrangement of the traditional Dúlamán, the sweetness of the inevitable Danny Boy (in another Earley arrangement), are but some of the
manifest pleasures here. The songs are actually quite wide-ranging, but they do
have a connecting theme, which is that of nature and the human relationship to
it. This is especially apparent in the traditional Wild Mountain Thyme (arranged by Eoin Conway), but also in Natasa
Paulberg’s A Star, Colin Mawby’s Bright Cap and Streamers, and elsewhere.
There is an elegance to the singing in this release that stands in pleasant
contrast to the generally homespun content of the music and that helps
listeners drift away into a twilit land where human nature and the natural
world coexist somewhat less uneasily than they do in everyday life.
Nature also arouses the passionate devotion and concern of composer Mark
Dal Porto, as is shown on a new Navona CD that mixes vocal and purely
instrumental material with similar focuses. The three choral works here are I Seek Rest for My Lonely Heart; When Your Song Rang Out to Me; and Spring, the Sweet Spring. The first, inspired by an ancient Chinese
poem, is for a cappella choir, the
second (based on a work by Clemens Brentano) and third (with words by Thomas
Nashe) for mixed chorus with piano. The China-inspired material is quiet and
thoughtful, the works based on German and Elizabethan sources much more upbeat,
and all pay due respect to the place of humans in nature and their reactions to
the surrounding world. There is something a bit distancing in the settings,
though, for all their careful beauty: the music seems a bit formulaic, as
indeed do some of the words. Some of the purely instrumental material on this
CD actually evokes the people-and-nature theme more effectively. Song of Eternity does so especially
well. This is another work inspired by ancient Chinese poetry, but its
inward-looking, lyrical and rather nostalgic sound produces a more
contemplative mood than does the a
cappella setting from a similar source. Even more heartfelt is Romance for Oboe and Piano, a real
husband-and-wife production: Dal Porto wrote it for Tracy Carr, to whom he is
married, and it is performed by the two of them. The feelings here are clearly
evoked and permeate the entire 12-minute work, although it must be said that,
musically, there are a number of times when the emotional expressions of the
two instruments clash and go off in different directions instead of blending.
This is an entirely human-focused piece; Exotic
Animals, a suite for woodwind quintet, is entirely nature-focused. It is
also quite delightful: it is the piece offered here that is least concerned
with being intense, serious and meaningful, and perhaps as a result is the most
appealing work on the CD. The first, bird-focused movement has performers
giving out with some deliberately discordant sounds through some playing
techniques that are well beyond the ordinary – used here for a real purpose,
not just to show the composer’s cleverness (as is often the case in works that
stretch the boundaries of traditional instruments). The second movement, on
snakes and lizards, is no less than a five-voice fugue whose subject slithers
and slides impressively. The finale, on cats such as lions, tigers and
leopards, reintroduces themes (and thus animals) from the first two movements,
then has them scattered by horn proclamations that sound distinctly like
big-cat roars. These three three-minute movements add up to a miniature suite
both expressive and amusing, and one that connects with the natural world to
very fine effect. The CD is bracketed by orchestral works: Song of Eternity is heard first, and the disc concludes with Mystic Mountain. The latter has
something in common scenically and musically with Honegger’s Mysterious Mountain, but Dal Porto’s
eight-minute montane scene is in some ways a far more compressed version of
Richard Strauss’s Alpine Symphony: both
Dal Porto and Strauss take listeners on a journey from the base of the mountain
to its top. However, true to its title, Mystic
Mountain ends not with stormy weather or a fast descent, but with a sense
of expansiveness and the glory of nature as perceived and appreciated by
humans. Dal Porto’s expressions of near-prayerful response to the mountain’s
summit are somewhat straightforward, as are his choral settings of poems: the
music on this (+++) CD is better when it does less-than-literal tone painting.
Still, the emotional connections that Dal Porto seeks often come through with
clarity and strength.
The passion of Belgian composer Frederic
D’Haene is for juxtaposition that results in something entirely new – not so
much a blending of opposites as a merger of them to create something that does
not superimpose one on the other but creates a style that, taking from both,
sounds like neither. D’Haene calls this “paradoxophony,” and as the awkwardness
of the word indicates, this is very much an intellectual rather than emotional
exercise. D’Haene is one of those composers for whom the technical elements
involved in constructing music are a passionate focus, while the communication
of the music with an audience – to the extent that there is any specific
communication at all – is decidedly a subsidiary matter. The new Ravello CD of
D’Haene’s Music with Silent Aitake’s
demonstrates just what D’Haene is after and just what listeners can and cannot
expect from the approach. The oddest thing about this creation is that the
music comes out sounding electronic even though it uses no electronics. That
sound is the result of combining traditional Japanese court music, called gagaku, with music made by a Western
instrumental ensemble. This is rarefied material indeed. There is some
structural form to it, more or less along the lines of a suite: there fairly
short netori, sort-of-preludes, are
interwoven with two far more extensive gagaku
sections in a whole lasting 40-plus minutes that never sounds as if it is going
anywhere and that can be stopped at pretty much any point without diminishing
or enhancing its overall effect. D’Haene offers a great deal of intellectual
gloss for the intricate processes and procedures underlying Music with Silent Aitake’s, and some of
his notions are interesting for the way in which they highlight the immense
cultural differences between Western and gagaku
traditions. Those differences largely flow from deeply differing underlying
societal paradigms: the individualistic Western tradition of looking to
leadership has much to do with the use of a conductor to lead and shape
musicians’ performances, while the longstanding collectivist nature of Japanese
and other Asian societies, in which individualism is downplayed to the point,
sometimes, of disappearance, explains the way in which gagaku performance expects players to use their inherent time sense
and their consciousness of other players to determine what to do, how to do it,
and at what speed to proceed. Intellectual framework aside, the question for
listeners – especially ones listening to the music on CD and thus without
seeing the performers – is how the material comes across, what effects it
produces. The answers will range from “none at all” to “utter boredom” to
“fascination with an intriguing cross-cultural experiment.” For an
ultra-avant-garde-favoring audience, this is a (+++) CD; for other listeners,
there is really nothing of value in it, and not much of music.
The entirety of Music with Silent Aitake’s is not much longer than a single work by
David Rosenboom from another new Ravello release – this one a two-CD offering.
The first piece on the first CD, Portable
Gold and Philosophers’ Stones (Deviant Resonances) runs more than 35
minutes all by itself, and it is a fair bet that listeners who find it
intriguing will want to hear other works on this recording, while those who
deem it meaningless, pretentious or both will have no further interest in
Rosenboom’s very extensively planned and executed material. Calling this
“music” is something of a stretch, as even Rosenboom might acknowledge. Where
D’Haene has “paradoxophony,” Rosenboom has “propositional music,” which means
creating nonmusical propositions of all sorts (up to and including creating forms
of consciousness and alternative universes) and then embodying those creations
in musical forms of some sort. This is heady material, to be sure, and
Rosenboom has been working with his ideas for half a century, so this is
clearly a matter of passionate devotion for him. It is likely to be much, much
less so for listeners, even those who would consider this a (+++) release for its
sheer daring and the unusual nature of Rosenboom’s creations – which involve
such techniques as analyzing the electrical signals from people’s brains and
then using complex computer programs to turn the brainwave activity into the
basis of a musical, or pseudo-musical, performance. Rosenboom certainly does
not lack for audacity: one piece recorded here, The Experiment, is taken from a “mobile opera for 24 cars” that was
actually staged in Los Angeles in 2015 in 24 limousines, each of them driving
audience members somewhere in the city as they heard spoken and sung material.
This sort of staged happening obviously owes a good deal to John Cage’s notion
of the interchangeability of performers and audience, and also to Cage’s belief
that everything is music whether or not traditionally deemed “musical.”
Rosenboom, however, takes matters quite a bit beyond where Cage took them. Like
much avant-garde material created under the general category of “music,”
Rosenboom’s works lose something in the translation to audio-only format: they
are inherently participatory and do not adapt particularly well to being heard
on CD. Listeners who already known Rosenboom from his decades of creations are
the natural and perhaps only significant audience for this release. But there
is also something to be said for regarding these pieces as “found objects” of a
sort: however carefully and meticulously constructed, they convey the
impression of a quirky assemblage of random sounds, sometimes surprisingly
quiet, sometimes bewildering in their range and complexity, and always
passionate in their own way.
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