Rachmaninoff: Trio élégiaque No. 1; Trio élégiaque
No. 2; Vocalise, Op. 34, No. 14. Hermitage Piano Trio (Misha Keylin, violin; Sergey
Antonov, cello; Ilya Kazantsev, piano). Reference Recordings. $19.98 (SACD).
Franz Ignaz Danzi: Sinfonia Concertante for Flute,
Clarinet and Orchestra; Joel Puckett: Concerto Duo; Saint-Saëns: Tarantelle,
Op. 6; Michael Abels: Winged Creatures. Demarre
McGill, flute; Anthony McGill, clarinet; Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Allen Tinkham. Cedille. $16.
James
Lentini: Concerto for Guitar and Strings; Rain Worthington: Full Circle; Jan Järvlepp: Camerata Music; Peter Castine: Aperture; Beth
Mehocic: Left of Winter. Navona.
$14.99.
The resemblances between the emotional expressiveness of Tchaikovsky and
Rachmaninoff are well-known, and the way the two composers were deeply imbued
with their Russian heritage is equally familiar. Indeed, the two men knew each
other, although Rachmaninoff, born in 1873, was only a young teenager when he
played his 1886 piano-four-hands transcription of the Manfred symphony for Tchaikovsky. But the composers’ connection is
notable in much of their music, and especially so in two early Rachmaninoff
works that are far less familiar than his piano concertos and symphonies. These
are piano trios, each marked Trio élégiaque, both in minor keys (G
minor and D minor), and both composed in the early 1890s: the first in 1892,
the second in 1893 – although the latter was revised in 1907 and again in 1917.
The spirit of Tchaikovsky pervades both the first work, which is short and in
one movement, and the second, which is quite long – 50 minutes – and in three. And
the pervasive melancholia of both the trios, so redolent of much of
Tchaikovsky’s output, would in later years become a well-known characteristic
of some of Rachmaninoff’s music as well. The two trios receive absolutely
splendid readings, filled with warmth and passion and presented in
exceptionally full and elegant sound, on a new Reference Recordings SACD
featuring the Hermitage Piano Trio. This is the ensemble’s first recording,
although its members have featured elsewhere as soloists – but the group’s
impassioned, deeply involving beauty of phrasing and cooperation is worthy of
trios that have been around far longer. The first Trio élégiaque has a specific tie to Tchaikovsky’s Manfred through a piano opening marked Lento lugubre, which is exactly how
Tchaikovsky marked the Manfred
beginning. The work as a whole, which opens despondently and ends with its main
theme as a funeral march, certainly deserves to be designated an elegy. And the
second trio really is one – for Tchaikovsky, whose death in 1893 led directly
to Rachmaninoff’s composition of the trio, which is dedicated to Tchaikovsky’s
memory. This is a brooding, grieving work almost throughout its substantial
length, and would be difficult to absorb in its sheer outpouring of emotion if
the Hermitage Piano Trio did not find so much sheer beauty and profundity in
the themes and their intensity of expression. The piano often dominates in this
second Trio élégiaque, but the
strings have plenty of opportunities for virtuosity as well, and all the
players handle their parts with assurance and a healthy helping of
heart-on-sleeve passion that fits the music of both Rachmaninoff and
Tchaikovsky exceptionally well when not allowed to overflow into formlessness.
The performers’ tight control of the material ensures that that never happens
in either trio, and the result is a pair of deeply moving and wholly convincing
performances. As an encore, the trio plays the famous Vocalise of 1915 in a 1928 transcription by Julius Conus. This is a
work whose melancholy aptly complements the forthright emotionalism of the two
trios. This disc could easily be a dour recording, and certainly it is one
better heard on a sunny day than amid dark clouds and looming thunderstorms.
But as an exploration of the emotional depth that Rachmaninoff could extract
from a three-instrument combination, it is as much an impressive achievement as
a depressive one.
A Cedille recording of far more varied
moods, featuring works by very different composers from three distinct time
periods, is a showpiece for the McGill brothers: Demarre, principal flute of
the Seattle Symphony, and Anthony, principal clarinet of the New York
Philharmonic. The two extended works here were composed two centuries apart and
provide a fascinating contrast in the ways in which writing for the
flute-and-clarinet combination has changed, and has not. The Sinfonia Concertante by Franz Danzi
(1763-1826) is beautifully poised, elegant in themes and structure, and
excellently balanced between the two soloists and between the solo performers
and orchestra. The bubbly concluding Polonaise
showcases the two solo winds to particularly pleasant effect. The Concerto Duo by Joel Puckett (born
1977), on the other hand, is jazz-inflected throughout, percussion-heavy, and
often sounds like TV or film music in its onward propulsiveness. Here the solo
instruments seem always on the verge of competitiveness (and sometimes immersed
in it), but their cooperative moments provide a fine contrast to their somewhat
jarring ones. Like many contemporary works, this one has titles for each of its
movements: “The Great American Scream Machine,” “Mama Dee’s Song for Joel,” and
“For Audrey.” Interestingly, the second movement is as long as the other two
put together – but Puckett’s finale, like Danzi’s of so many years earlier,
neatly ties up the relationship between flute and clarinet into a combination
that highlights each instrument’s range and sound very well. The CD also
features Winged Creatures by Michael
Abels (born 1962), and this piece really does sound as if it is ready to take
off at any moment, with the flute’s musical flights, in particular, seeming
always on the verge of soaring skyward. And then there is a real charmer of an
encore, not as early as the Danzi or as recent as the Puckett and Abels works:
Saint-Saëns’ marvelously exuberant Tarantelle,
where the solo winds are constantly on the verge of tripping over each other
but never quite do – instead, they chase each other around the stage
(metaphorically) in a perpetuum mobile
whose only real fault here is that it is placed between the Danzi and Puckett
works and is therefore more a placeholder or punctuation point than an encore.
And that is about as small a quibble as it is possible to have about a
thoroughly engaging recording.
The solo flute figures as well on a new
Navona anthology release that includes five composers, four conductors and
three orchestras. Not surprisingly, this (+++) CD lacks any centrality of theme
or significant musical cohesiveness, but it has numerous highlights that
listeners who enjoy contemporary orchestral works will find congenial. The work
here that features flute is Aperture
by Peter Castine, in which soloist Barbara Hill performs with the Moravian
Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Stanislav
Vavřínek. Written after the terrorist murders that struck New York City on
September 11, 2001, this is one of many works of the time expressing a mixture
of horror and sadness through dissonance and, in this case, a rather fragmented
feeling, in which the flute and string orchestra seem mostly to be at
cross-purposes rather than working together. Castine’s work is one of three
solo-and-ensemble works on the disc. Rain Worthington’s Full Circle is for cello solo (Petr Nouzovský) and small orchestra
(the Moravian Philharmonic again, this time conducted by Petr Vronský). This is
an interestingly structured work: in it, musical elements emerge from the
orchestra’s members as well as from the soloist, then recede into the overall
texture – an attempt to show the way emotions arise and subside, intriguing
conceptually if not always clear in the execution. The Concerto for Guitar and Strings by James Lentini is the third work
here that features a soloist (Iliana Matos). Here the ensemble is the Zagreb
Festival Orchestra under Miran Vaupotić. The work itself is efficiently
structured to highlight the guitar against the orchestra and produce the
expected ups and downs of its traditional three-movement form – it is well-made
music but rather characterless. Also offered here is Camerata Music by Jan Järvlepp; this is another performance
featuring the Moravian Philharmonic under Vronský. This is a nicely bouncy
piece, essentially tonal, with some dance rhythms inspired by the folk music of
Colombia; and at less than eight minutes, the work does not overstay its
welcome. Even shorter – indeed, the shortest piece on the CD – is the
concluding offering, Left of Winter
by Beth Mehocic, which is for full orchestra: the Janáček Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by Jiří Petrdlík. This has an interesting history,
having been conceived as a prelude to a production of Stravinsky’s Le Sacre de Printemps. Even without
knowing that, listeners familiar with the Stravinsky would hear echoes of it in
the extended and heavy use of percussion and the frequent changes of rhythm.
Mehocic’s piece lacks the sheer drama of Stravinsky’s and tends to be rather
loud and insistent, while Stravinsky’s is subtle. But the comparison is unfair
to Mehocic, who has created a work of drama and intensity that could function
as a Stravinsky prelude but can just as well stand on its own as an effective
curtain-raiser or, as here, an encore to a very variegated program.
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