Andrew Anderson: Piano Quartets Nos. 1 and 2. Australia Piano Quartet (Kristian
Winther, violin; James Wannan, viola; Thomas Rann, cello; Daniel de Borah,
piano). Navona. $14.99.
Eleanor Alberga: String Quartets Nos. 1-3. Ensemble Arcadiana (Thomas
Bowes and Jacqueline Shave/Oscar Perks, violins; Andres Kaljuste, viola; Jonathan
Swensen, cello). Navona. $14.99.
Joseph T. Spaniola: Escapade; Klempirik Farms;
Blow, Eastern Winds; Dream; The Winds of the Quadrumvirate; Der Heyser Bulgar. Big Round Records. $14.99.
Combinations of four musicians and four
instruments continue to intrigue contemporary composers, who sometimes use
traditional quartet ensembles to communicate their ideas and sometimes put
together groups of four instruments pretty much ad hoc, without regard to
whether those groupings have been used in the past. Andrew Anderson and Eleanor
Aberga opt for traditional instrumental mixtures on new Navona discs, while
Joseph T. Spaniola uses some unusual and unexpected groupings on a release from
Big Round Records.
Anderson’s first piano quartet (2010) is
unusual for a contemporary piece in being designated as being in a specific
key: C minor. This strong commitment to tonality is not in itself unusual – many
modern composers have rediscovered the value of building works around a tonal
center – but affirming the key in the work’s title is somewhat out of the
ordinary in today’s music. So is the piece’s structure, which has opening and
closing movements pretty much in traditional sonata form. There are four
movements in all, and they proceed in a familiar manner: opening, slow
movement, more-or-less Scherzo, and finale. Indeed, the work as a whole has a
familiar feeling about it much of the time, with clear debts to the Romantic
era. Yet that is scarcely the whole story here: the second movement has a
distinctly modern feeling about it and is more harmonically ambiguous than the
quartet’s key designation would lead a listener to expect, while the third has a
bouncy, fleet-of-foot pacing that makes it sound as if it is almost (but not
quite) a musical joke. The quartet is in an overall arch form, with the two
outer movements each running about 10 minutes and the two inner ones about
eight minutes apiece; and the seriousness that pervades the outer movements is
well-balanced by the lighter fare of the inner ones. The second quartet (2018)
is in two extended parts, each with multiple tempo changes. Although this
quartet opens with a bow to the Romantic era, its overall sound is much more
what listeners will expect of 21st-century music. The first movement
has five sections, the second seven, and the tempo changes are generally subtle
ones: the first movement’s indications are “Introduction,” “Larghetto,”
“Andante,” “Lento,” and “Andante.” The overall pacing of the quartet is slow
and measured, and there is a pervasive gloominess to much of the music even
without a firm footing in any specific minor key. The result is that the work
tends to drag: it is possible to appreciate the care with which it has been
constructed even while noticing that it spends much of its time in a slough of
despond. Occasionally a passage of beauty emerges, usually on the cello, but
these are few and far between. The second quartet sounds, much of the time, as
if it is mired in quicksand and not particularly concerned with getting out.
Like the first quartet, it is very well-constructed, and also like the first,
it gets an exemplary performance from the Australia Piano Quartet (the composer
himself is Australian). And the two sections of the second quartet’s second
part that are marked “Ritmico, alla breve” bring some much-needed forward
motion to a work that is otherwise pretty much static. Those sections, however,
are not enough to counter the generally dour mood that the second quartet
projects.
The moods are of many kinds in Alberga’s
three string quartets, which date, respectively, to 1993, 1994, and 2001. Alberga’s
third string quartet covers some of the same emotional territory as Anderson’s
second piano quartet, although Alberga delves far more deeply into 20th-century
and 21st-century compositional methods – including atonality,
dodecaphony, rhythmic irregularity, and a frequent focus on the extremes of the
instruments’ ranges. This four-movement work is the longest quartet of the
three and is, indeed, somewhat overlong, in large part because it progresses
through repetition rather than development of its thematic material. The
recurrence in the finale of material from the first three movements, a
tried-and-true method of pulling a piece together, is adeptly handled – and
very well played by Ensemble Arcadiana, which is clearly quite at home with
Alberga’s style and performance demands. But the overall effect here is
somewhat bland. The two earlier quartets are more interesting. The first, which
Alberga says was inspired by a physics lecture explaining that all matter is
made of star dust, contains no obvious tone-painting or narrative but a great
deal of expressive interplay among the instruments. The first movement seems to
proceed in all directions at once – the instruments rarely coalesce – while the
second has a rather conventional sense of contemplating the wonder of it all,
and the third and last is so intensely energetic that it sounds as if someone
in the quartet is always on the verge of breaking a string. Alberga’s titles
for the movements are exceptional in their inventiveness and the way they tie
to the musical material: the second movement is marked “Espressivo with wonder
and yearning,” the third is “Frantically driven yet playful” (which is exactly
how it sounds), and the first and most-unusual title is “Détaché et martellato e zehr lebhaft und swing it
man.” The music is not quite as good as these titles but has much to recommend
it. As for the second quartet, it is in a single movement, is the most
compressed of the three, and is the most tightly constructed, being in effect a
series of variations (with that word broadly defined) on material introduced at
the outset. Atonal and insistent, it is appealing more on an intellectual level
than an emotional one, standing in that respect in contrast to the first
quartet. The second quartet contains slow-ish and scherzo-ish elements within
its overall flow, but there is an impression of randomness to it that belies
the care with which it was obviously put together: it sounds more disorganized
than it is, possibly because the complete lack of a tonal center makes it
difficult to know what Alberga is here trying to communicate.
Only two of the six works on the Spaniola
disc have four-instrument groups as a focus, and in both cases the groupings
are entirely of clarinets. In Klempirik
Farms, clarinets in B-flat are played by Noelle Little, George Roach, and
Heike Gazetti, with Kariann Voights on bass clarinet. This short three-movement
work bounces along tonally and in good humor as a tribute to Spaniola’s
family’s farm and farming in general. In The
Winds of the Quadrumvirate – a title with direct reference to the four
directions of the compass – Little plays E-flat clarinet, Crystal Proper is on
B-flat clarinet, Scott Richardson plays basset horn, and Claudia Weir is on
bass clarinet. The wind group is set off against a larger wind band (the US Air
Force Academy Band conducted by Lt. Col. Steven Grimo) in a work that is
denser, less tonal and by intent more grandiose than Klempirik Farms. There are some nice percussion touches here, but
there is also a persistent repetitiveness underlying the material that takes
some of the shine off the fine playing by the four-wind solo group. Two of the
remaining works on this disc are strictly for large wind ensemble. Escapade, again featuring the US Air
Force Academy Band but this time conducted by Lt. Col. Philip C. Chevallard,
opens with a fanfare and afterwards meanders in directions that are less than
fully clear but that offer some very appealing sound-for-its-own-sake elements.
Blow, Eastern Winds, in which Todd
Nichols conducts the Eastern Wind Symphony (which commissioned the work), is
milder and less hectic. It also has a greater sense of destination, although it
too gives the members of the ensemble plenty of chances to showcase the
particular sounds of their instruments. As a portrayal of different types of
winds (in weather), it is a bit overdone, but as a way to shine a spotlight on
different types of winds (in music), it is effective. The two other works here
use groupings of five and six, respectively. Dream, at almost 17 minutes the longest piece on the CD, features
Danny Helseth on euphonium, Mark Dorosheff and Nathan Wisniewski on violins,
Bryce Bunner on viola, and Christine Choi on cello. If there were an official
designation of “euphonium quintet” (along the lines of “piano quintet”), this
combination would qualify. Structurally, though, Dream is closer to a concerto for euphonium and small ensemble,
with the euphonium in the lead position pretty much throughout – not too
surprisingly, since Helseth commissioned the piece. As a showcase for Helseth’s
instrument, Dream is well-done,
providing plenty of chances to explore the euphonium’s range and its emotional
capabilities. But the relatively bland string accompaniment adds little to the
piece, and after a while it drags and seems to run out of steam. Not so Der Heyser Bulgar, which makes a
marvelously upbeat four-minute encore. It is performed by the Stellar Brass,
consisting of Steven Przyzycki, xylophone; Steven Kindermann and Tim Allums,
trumpet; John Gohl, trombone; Gary Poffenbarger, tuba; and Gary Stephens,
tambourine. This is a traditional Yiddish folk song created as an exercise in
xylophone virtuosity at Przyzycki’s request, and Spaniola certainly fulfills
that commission adeptly: the piece is relentlessly bright and upbeat, and the
xylophone sounds front-and-center throughout. This CD has its ups and downs, to
be sure, but it certainly ends on an up note. Or, rather, a series of up notes.
Many thanks for taking the time to review my new piano quartet disc, and I'm sorry that the mood of the second quartet wasn't quite to your liking. Who knows - maybe with repeated listening you might end up ranking it above the first, as reviewer Philip R Buttall has suggested (http://musicweb-international.com/classrev/2019/Jul/Anderson_quartets_NV6235.htm).
ReplyDeleteAll good wishes from Melbourne,
Andrew