Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 17 and 24. Orli Shaham, piano; St.
Louis Symphony Orchestra conducted by David Robertson. Canary Classics. $16.
Lachlan Skipworth: Piano Trio; Piano Quartet;
Clarinet Quintet; Intercurrent; The Night Sky Fall. Akiko Miyazawa, violin; Aleksandar
Madžar, Emily Green-Armytage and James Guan, piano; Ashley William Smith,
clarinet and bass clarinet; Anna Pokorny, Jon Tooby and Umberto Clerici, cello;
Bella Hristova, clarinet; Kate Sullivan, violin; Ben Caddy, viola; Louise
Devenish, marimba and psalterphone. Navona. $14.99.
Bill Whitley: Then Elephant Speaks; The Circles,
2017; The Circles, 2010. Elena Talarico and Bill Whitley, piano; Lucia Foti, harp; Stefano
Grasso, vibes; Francesco Zago, electric guitars and electronics. Ravello.
$14.99.
There are endless ways to interpret
Mozart, endless reasons for doing so, and endless explanations of why one
interpretation or another “works” or does not. The reality is that all
interpretations “work” if they interest, intrigue, move, engage, attract the
audience; in that sense, whether they are academically correct, historically
informed, careful to play what the composer expected to hear or more concerned
with being heard in a modern setting by contemporary audiences, is largely
irrelevant to their “rightness.” This is important to remember at a time when
ongoing arguments about piano type, orchestra size, recording venue and more
seem never-ending when it comes to music from before the 20th century
(and even some from the 20th
century). Mozart’s music, like Bach’s, communicates effectively, often
brilliantly, whether or not played in the way Mozart played it himself or
expected others to play it. Academics can argue whatever points they will, but
what ultimately matters is whether performers have something valuable to say,
to communicate to listeners, and have found an effective way of bringing it
forth. What is striking about the Orli Shaham/David Robertson collaboration in
two well-known Mozart piano concertos, on the Canary Classics label, is how
well it communicates feelings and expressions that seem “Mozartean” even though
there is nothing historically accurate about the recording at all. The
orchestra is too large for Mozart’s time, the piano far too big and resonant, the
cadenzas not at all in Mozart’s style (especially in the first movement of
Concerto No. 24), and Shaham’s playing is far too focused on the emotionally
expressive passages of the music – not only in the enormously powerful No. 24
but also in the slow movement of No. 17. Purists will not care for what Shaham
and Robertson have done here, although they will (or at least should)
appreciate the consistency of these interpretations and the excellent support
that the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra accords Shaham. But as a reaching-out CD,
as a deeply felt production that connects beautifully and meaningfully with an
audience 230-plus years after these concertos were written, the recording is
absolutely first-rate. Shaham and Robertson clearly have deep feelings for
Mozart that they know how to translate into feelings to be shared with an
at-home audience. It is extraordinarily difficult to listen to this recording
without giving it full attention: it insists that what it has to say is more
important than anything else that may be in a listener’s environment while the
disc plays. This is by no means always the case with recorded music, or even
with recorded Mozart, which can descend into mere prettiness without the
counterbalancing pathos that is one of the signposts of Mozart’s genius. It
would be facile and rather silly to say that Shaham and Robertson “channel”
Mozart; better to say that they understand
Mozart with a thoroughness that allows his music to flow through them and
through these performances in a way that connects directly with an audience
that, objectively, is immeasurably different
from any for which Mozart wrote or could have written. The way Shaham
shapes each individual variation of the finale of Concerto No. 17, the considerable drama of the coda of that movement, the
unbridled intensity Shaham insists on presenting from the start of Concerto No.
24, the almost unbearable heights to which she takes that intensity in the
finale of the latter concerto – these and many other touches illuminate aspects
of Mozart that have always been there in the score (and of which, to be sure,
other performers have also been cognizant), but that Shaham and Robertson
connect with tremendous skill in performances that are fully and beautifully
integrated from start to finish. This is not “correct” Mozart in the historical
sense, but it is hard to escape the feeling that it is very much correct in its
effects, its meaning, and its emotional impact. The ultimate test of
performances for most listeners is not whether they are historically accurate
but whether they are convincing – and these certainly are.
It is the piano’s percussive elements rather
than its expressive ones that tend to be most thoroughly explored by many 21st-century
composers, often in contexts that would mystify Mozart and may well mystify
many of the people who garner meaning from Mozart’s approach to the instrument
and to music in general. In a (+++) release from Navona of the music of Lachlan
Skipworth, an Australian composer originally trained as a clarinetist, the
piano might seem logically to be a focus of the Piano Trio and Piano Quartet,
but in fact it is something of an also-ran among the other instruments in these
works and throughout the disc. The reason is that all the Western instruments he
writes for are much less meaningful to Skipworth than the shakuhachi, a five-hole bamboo flute – blown into at the end, not
transversely – that Skipworth studied for three years in Japan. Although the shakuhachi does not itself appear in any
of the music on this disc, the tonal world of the instruments is redolent of
Japanese sensibilities, and even the treatment of the clarinet seems informed
by Skipworth’s experiences in Japan. Indeed, Skipworth is at pains to try to
re-create Japanese musical experiences and sounds using Western instruments,
with the result that he builds these pieces from strange-to-Western-ideas
rhythmic (and non-rhythmic) groupings, mathematical principles of the sort that
underlie the work of many modern Western composers who have become dissatisfied
with the traditional tools and sounds of Western music, and so on. His interest
seems to be primarily in using the form
of pieces for shakuhachi without
employing the instrument itself. The result, pleasingly for some listeners but
certainly not for all, is a set of pieces in which the basic sound is at least
vaguely familiar, while the structural elements are either outré or appear
absent altogether. Subsumed within the soundworld of Japanese-style music but
limited in performance by the strictures of design of Western instruments, the
performers on this CD all work hard to convey Skipworth’s “audio vision.” But
the extent to which they succeed is hard to determine. The reason is that it is
difficult to know just what Skipworth wants an audience to absorb from his
music – as opposed to what he wants to put into it. He clearly wants to
duplicate and expand upon some of the musical and spiritual feelings evoked in
him by his time in Japan and his studies there. But what does this bring to the
audience? For instance, iIf Skipworth uses a somewhat aleatoric principle that
he calls floating time to try to make
performers respond intuitively, rather than at the composer’s direction, to
each other, then he is inventing (not exactly “composing”) music that will be
different each time it is played – as is always the case with “chance” music.
But what about the audience? Is its response left to chance as well, or is
Skipworth seeking something more specific? That question is not answered by any
piece on this CD. Clearly the sheer sound of these pieces is preeminent in
Skipworth’s thinking, which is why he even invented one of the instruments
heard on this recording: the psalterphone, a set of metal rectangular tubes.
And certainly listeners who enjoy modern sounds for their own sake – athematic,
arrhythmic, unmelodic, uneven in tempo and loudness – may be intrigued by
Skipworth’s pieces and their unusual melding of Western and Japanese elements. However,
it is obvious that Skipworth is not reaching out to a wide audience but to the cognoscenti, however defined.
A (+++) Ravello disc featuring music by
Bill Whitley takes a somewhat more conventional approach to the piano and other
instruments, at least part of the time. It also incorporates electronic sounds
of various sorts, in the way that many contemporary composers do, setting
acoustic instruments against enhanced ones or against actual electronics.
Whitley’s music is not the same each time it is heard, but unlike Skipworth’s,
this is not because it is filled with chance elements – instead, it is because
Whitley offers the music in different mixes and therefore uses it to produce
different effects. Then Elephant Speaks
in its first iteration here features quiet and basically conventional piano
sounds for the first half, before other instruments enter; the pacing is
deliberate and the mood quiet and even wistful. The remixed version leans far
more heavily on vibes and electric guitars, producing a more otherworldly sound
in which there are many echoes of the first version but the context has changed
throughout. The Circles, 2017, in its
first version, again features a moderately paced, mostly traditionally
harmonized piano part, with clear but relatively modest contributions by
electronics. The second version of the same piece makes the electronics far
more prominent, to the point that the piano sounds as if it is accompanying
them rather than the other way around. Aurally much less pleasing, this second
version has a more overtly “modern” sound to it as it keeps the electronics
front and center. And there is a third version of the same piece – which
Whitley wrote seven years earlier than the first two. This is The Circles, 2010, in which the piano is
the only instrument present, offering the basics of what would become the
more-elaborate works from 2017. Whitley plays this 2010 version himself. This
disc provides some interesting insight into the thinking and methods of a
contemporary composer, but here as in the Skipworth CD, it is worth asking what
the audience is supposed to receive from and then take away from hearing the
material. The Whitley disc includes 17 minutes of the two versions of Then Elephant Speaks and 12 of the three
versions of The Circles, so listeners
get 29 minutes’ worth of five pieces that are really two pieces played and
mixed in different ways. Is the result worthwhile? As an audio experiment, it
certainly has its moments, and those who enjoy dissecting modern compositional
techniques will find the different versions of these works interesting to
compare. But listeners without that strong intellectual interest in deciphering
Whitley’s musical/electronic thinking will likely find the not-quite-half-hour
of material on this disc to be quite a bit more than enough.
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