Gade: Erlkönigs Tochter; Fünf Gesänge. Sophie Junker, soprano;
Ivonne Fuchs, mezzo-soprano; Johannes Weisser, baritone; Danish National Vocal
Ensemble and Concerto Copenhagen conducted by Lars Ulrik Mortensen. Dacapo. $16.99.
Harry Partch: Ulysses at the Edge of the World;
Twelve Intrusions; Windsong; Sonata Dementia. Ensemble PARTCH. Bridge Records. $14.99.
Strictly for those seeking something
unusual from the 19th century, the world première recording of
the1864 version of Danish composer Niels W. Gade’s Erlkönigs Tochter (“The Elf-King’s Daughter”) is now available on
the Danish label Dacapo with a Danish chorus and instrumental ensemble – sung
in German. This may seem odd from a repertoire standpoint, but it is not from a
historical one, since Gade was quite well thought of in Germany during his
lifetime. Indeed, Elverskud (the
work’s Danish title), completed and originally performed in 1854, was
translated into German the next year and performed in Germany three times in 1855
alone. The dramatic cantata remained popular, gaining more international
attention in German than in the original Danish; Gade made a number of changes
in the instrumentation in 1864. The work, in any language, is not well-known
today, and its performance by the original-instrument ensemble Concerto
Copenhagen is a welcome and quite idiomatic one. It is also quite
international: soprano Sophie Junker, who sings the title role, is Belgian;
mezzo-soprano/alto Ivonne Fuchs, in the role of the ill-fated knight’s mother,
is German/Swedish; baritone Johannes Weisser, as the knight, is Norwegian; and
the Danish National Vocal Ensemble is, of course, Danish. The story is a
typical warning-against-the-fey folktale, based on medieval ballads, in which a
knight, on the eve of his wedding, rides off – supposedly to invite additional
guests, but in reality to calm a heart already torn between his earthly bride
and the elf-king’s daughter. Sure enough, he encounters elven enchantment that
leads, when he returns home on what is supposed to be his wedding morning, to
his death. Structured by Gade as a series of nine songs (three each in three
parts of the story), with a prologue and epilogue that both use the same music
and contain the same “beware” message, Erlkönigs
Tochter is particularly intriguing for showing that Gade, like Grieg and
Sibelius, was interested in the nationalistic and folkloric elements of
Scandinavia in addition to being heavily influenced throughout his
compositional life by German musical traditions and, in particular, by
Mendelssohn. The music at the end of the prologue, for example, sounds very
distinctly Mendelssohnian, while the orchestral section that opens the second
part of Gade’s work is especially notable for its harmonic and instrumental
evocation of night in the realm of the fairy folk. Erlkönigs Tochter is paired on this very interesting CD with an earlier,
a cappella choral work with an even stronger
German connection, Fünf Gesänge of
1846 – using German texts and first published in Leipzig. Gade was a
church-choir conductor, among other things, and quite skilled in writing for
massed voices in ways that allow vocal lines to come through clearly in appealing
melodies. These five songs, four to texts by Emanuel Geibel and one to words by
the better-known Ludwig Tieck, are about various aspects of nature: spring, the
water lily, walking in the woods, autumn, and the joy of sunshine in the
forest. The Romanticism of the words is palpable, and the settings have a
clarity and fine vocal balance that make these two-to-three-minute songs into
enjoyable pleasantries. Gade’s music remains relatively infrequently heard
outside Denmark, and these specific works will be of particular interest to
listeners who know him mainly through his symphonies, which are his best-known
pieces today.
Listeners interested in highly unusual
music from the 20th century rather than the 19th can hear
a considerable amount of it on a new Bridge Records release featuring some of
the outré creations of Harry Partch (1901-1974). Partch wrote music that sounds
different from anything else of his time or, for that matter, any time. A
theorist who subdivided the octave into as many as 43 tones and then created
instruments that could play the resulting music, Partch was one of the earliest
users of microtonality – and a musical experimenter as far from the norm in one
direction as John Cage was in another. Because Partch’s musical notation gives
no indication of what his works should actually sound like, his pieces have yet
another layer of performance difficulty associated with them. The ensemble
PARTCH, however, has made it a habit to unlock the mysteries and sounds of its
namesake composer, and the group’s new CD shows, as so often happens with
Partch’s creations, that the material is more “listenable” than its highly
abstruse and genuinely odd conceptualization would lead listeners to expect.
There are three world première recordings here: Sonata Dementia, Windsong (the score to an art-house film), and –
as a bonus track – a live 1942 recording of Partch himself performing Barstow: Eight Hitchhikers’ Inscriptions
from a Highway Railing at Barstow, California (1941), which is one of
Partch’s best-known works, to the extent that any of them are known to audiences
at large. What is noteworthy (and yes, that is a pun) about Partch is that
whatever the peculiarities of his structure and notation may be – and they are
many – the music he created, when coaxed out of its labyrinth of complexity, is
genuinely interesting to hear and has a sound all its own. It is almost tonal,
but the word “tonal” has little meaning when it comes to Partch – his creations
really require a new vocabulary. The members of PARTCH certainly speak it,
whatever “it” may be. Thus, Ulysses at the
Edge of the World (1962), subtitled “A Minor Adventure in Rhythm,” mixes
percussive and other rhythmic sounds effectively. Twelve Intrusions (1950) is filled with vocalizations, some of them
discernible words and some more like groans and sighs – and here Partch proves
himself quite capable of Impressionism of a sort, in pieces such as “The
Waterfall” and “The Wind,” and also of deliberately overstated scholarly or
pseudo-scholarly endeavors (“Study #1 on Olympus' Pentatonic” and “Study #2 on Archytas' Enharmonic”). Windsong (1958) opens with straightforward narration and proceeds
into a sonic agglutination that sounds, in the main, like percussion gone wild.
Sonata Dementia (1950) is in three
movements labeled “Abstraction & Delusion,” “Scherzo Schizophrenia,” and
“Allegro Paranoia,” and the second and third, in particular, reflect their
titles so well that it can be hard to determine whether some sections are vocal
or instrumental (this is actually a characteristic of much Partch music, a
consequence of the way he subdivides octaves). The Barstow bonus track, recorded at the Eastman School, starts with an
introduction to the piece (and to the town of Barstow) by the composer and is
narrated by him with considerable attentiveness to the emotions of the unknown
hitchhikers whose words the piece memorializes. There is also one other bonus
track on this CD: a short Native American chant taken from a 1904 Edison
cylinder and giving some intriguing insight into one of the sources from which
Partch’s mini-micro-tonal explorations emerged. Partch was an outlier among
outliers in music, and his works are unlikely ever to garner widespread
acceptance, much less enthusiasm. But for listeners seeking the highly unusual
or ones already aware of Partch’s existence, if not the extent of his
explorations, the ensemble PARTCH here offers an excellent selection of
material that is as well-if-strangely-performed as it is
well-if-strangely-constructed.
No comments:
Post a Comment