Beethoven: Music for Mandolin and Piano—Adagio ma
non troppo, WoO 43b; Sonatina in C minor, WoO 43a; Sonata in C, WoO 44a;
Andante con variazioni, WoO 44b; Allegretto from Symphony No. 7; Hummel: Grande
Sonata for Mandolin and Piano; Corentin Apparailly: Lettre à l’immortelle
bien-aimée; Fritz Kreisler: Rondino on a Theme of Beethoven; Walter Murphy: A
Fifth of Beethoven. Julien Martineau, mandolin; Vanessa Benelli Mosell, piano; Yann Dubost,
double bass; José Fillatreau, drums. Naïve. $16.99.
Reza Vali: Three Romantic Songs for Violin and
Piano; Calligraphy No. 14— Âshoob; Calligraphy No. 15—Raak; Love Drunk for
Violin and Piano; Ormavi—String Quartet No. 4. Carpe Diem String Quartet
(Charles Wetherbee and Amy Galluzzo, violins; Korine Fujiwara, viola; Carol Ou,
cello); David Korevaar, piano; Dariush Saghafi, santoor. MSR Classics. $12.95.
The mandolin is scarcely an instrument
usually associated with Beethoven. Indeed, even listeners who are highly
familiar with his music are often surprised to discover that he wrote four
works for it, with piano accompaniment, early in his career. The pieces were
never formally published, but mandolin players know them well, and now the four
works have become the jumping-off point for an unusual and rather quirky Naïve
CD featuring Julien Martineau and pianist Vanessa Benelli Mosell. The playing
here is excellent, but anyone expecting fidelity to historic practices will be
roundly disappointed: Martineau and Mosell delve deeply into the emotional
subtext of the music, pulling it further into the Romantic era than,
objectively speaking, it really needs to go. Mosell’s use of a modern concert
grand, and her willingness to have the piano’s emotive capabilities in the
forefront, make these slight pieces – all four together run just 23 minutes –
expressive in a way that reaches beyond their time without fitting fully into
ours. But there is method to this not-quite-madness, and it starts to become
clear in the Martineau/Mosell performance of Hans Sitt’s arrangement of the Allegretto from Beethoven’s Seventh
Symphony. This is a genuinely strange-sounding arrangement that includes all
the notes of the movement and very little of its sensibility: listeners need to
don a different set of ears from the one they would usually use for this music
if they are to appreciate the gentle undulations and very intimate emotional
compass of this performance. This is exceptionally tender music that, however,
bears only a passing resemblance to what Beethoven intended. Indeed,
Beethoven’s centrality to this disc shines through more in its non-Beethoven
works than in those by Beethoven himself. The gem of the recording is Hummel’s
sonata, a finely crafted three-movement work that partakes distinctly of
Beethoven’s spirit – the two composers were sometimes friends, sometimes rivals
– but that goes well beyond Beethoven’s little pieces to showcase the potential
of a genuine mandolin-fortepiano partnership. Yes, fortepiano: Hummel’s sonata
dates to about 1810, some 15 years after Beethoven wrote his mandolin works,
but this was still the age of the fortepiano, not anything approaching the
modern piano – so in the Hummel as in the Beethoven, Mosell’s warmth and
expressiveness convey more sentiment than the music actually contains. Still,
all these pieces are technically played very well indeed, and Martineau’s
sensitivity to the mandolin’s sound and capabilities is exceptional. However,
the real heart of this CD, for the performers, seems to lie in the three works
most distant in time from the age of Beethoven and Hummel. One of those is a
mandolin-and-piano arrangement of the little violin-and-piano Rondino by Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962), a
tiny delicacy (running two-and-a-half minutes) that is gone almost before it
has conveyed what feeling it possesses. Much more recent is a work of the 21st
century, a musical Lettre attempting
to convey some sense of Beethoven’s “immortal beloved” and here receiving its
world première recording. This piece is by Corentin Apparailly (born 1995) and
sounds a great deal like romantic-film music, especially in the grandly
sweeping central portion. It is suitably lyrical and, indeed, somewhat
old-fashioned in a heart-on-sleeve way. It could have served as an encore for
the disc; so could Kreisler’s Rondino.
But the actual finale here, and the work to which the entire CD seems to build,
is an elaboration by Bruno Fontaine of the 1976 disco hit, A Fifth of Beethoven, by Walter Murphy (born 1952). The arrangement
adds double bass and drums to mandolin and piano and, in all, sounds rather
weird – intriguing, but weird. Murphy’s original has become well-known, and it
still possesses a level of attractive crudity in its use of Beethoven themes
with a disco beat. The Fontaine version turns the heat up a notch to produce a
highly jazzy and deliberately odd-sounding piece whose relationship to
Beethoven – and certainly to Beethoven’s own mandolin music – is less than
intimate. This entire CD comes across as a kind of playground for Martineau and
Mosell, a foray into less-known Beethoven that is less an exploration of the
unfamiliar than a use of a romanticized view of Beethoven’s music as an entry
point to a patchwork quilt of other material.
If the sound of the mandolin is not
usually associated with Beethoven, that of the santoor or santur – a hammered
dulcimer of ancient provenance – is not usually, if ever, associated with that
of a string quartet. But that combination is exactly what the music of Iranian
composer Reza Vali (born 1952) offers – among other things – in a set of world
première recordings on a new MSR Classics CD. The mandolin’s gentleness can be
difficult to juxtapose effectively against the piano (although it works much
better against a fortepiano), but the santoor’s rather harsh and percussive
sound certainly makes it stand out against Western strings. However, Vali here
offers some music with the santoor and considerably more music that seeks
exotic sounds without it. The most conservative piece on the disc, Three Romantic Songs (2011), is a short
suite written solely for violin and piano and intended as homage to Brahms –
whose warmth and sumptuous sound the work more or less replicates, but without
plumbing comparable emotional depths. It is more gestural than heartfelt. Love Drunk (2014) is also a
violin-and-piano work; its overall title is also the title of its final,
shortest movement. The suite is subtitled “Folk Songs, Set No. 16B,” and its
movements do partake of and reflect folk music from Reza’s home region. Again
here, the intent to communicate emotionally is clear enough, but the music
lacks genuine emotive power and speaks mainly on a surface level. The disc is
dominated by two string quartets. No. 4, Ormavi
(2017), has sounds ranging from the fairly traditional Western to the faintly
exotic Iranian/Persian-influenced. Its eight movements offer varying moods and
tempos but little feeling of depth. The other quartet, called Raak (2016) and written as a single
extended movement, opens rather cacophonously and remains unsettled-feeling
throughout. Although the instruments sometimes emerge individually from the
massed sound, this is primarily an ensemble piece – one in which the performers
do not so much have a conversation as an attempt to overlay each one’s
impression of the material on all the others. Sometimes the music descends into
cliché, as in a series of rising and falling scales near the midpoint; at other
times it indulges in atonality and arrhythmia to no particular end. Raak contains some interesting material,
but not enough to sustain it as an 18-plus-minute movement. All these works use
only strings or strings plus piano, but all emulate the sound of
less-familiar-to-Western-ears instruments. And Raak, in addition to being a string quartet, is one of the three works
here given the subtitle Calligraphy, being
designated No. 15. It is in No. 14 of the Calligraphy
series that Vali shows most clearly how he sees Western instruments and sounds
in complement to and contrast with others. No. 14 is called Âshoob and is heard in two versions, one
for string quartet alone (2015) and one for quartet plus santoor (2014). The
essential music is the same in both cases, but where the expressiveness of the
quartet version lies in the dramatic loud/soft contrasts and the use of specific
techniques of emphasis, such as pizzicato,
the version including santoor subsumes all four string players beneath the
insistent santoor sound – even when that sound appears intended to blend with
that of the quartet. The themes and their working-out seem more thoroughly at
home in the santoor version than in the one for strings alone: the dulcimer
emphasizes the exotic-to-Western-ears nature of the material in a way beyond
what is done by the strings alone. There remains a certain comparatively empty
feeling to the music – the insistent concluding portion, for instance, is
apparently intended as dramatic but comes across mainly as repetitive. But the
addition of the santoor seems to bring the material closer to the form of
expressiveness that Vali seeks. Indeed, the CD might have been of greater
interest if it had included more material using the santoor and less using only
strings and piano to produce sounds that do not always lie comfortably on those
instruments.
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