Music for Viola and Piano from Chile—works by
Rafael Díaz, Carlos Botto, Federico Heinlein, David Cortés, Juan Orrego-Salas,
and Carlos Guastavino. Georgina Isabel Rossi, viola; Silvie Cheng, piano. New Focus
Recordings. $16.99.
Richard Carrick: Chamber Music. New Focus Recordings.
$16.99.
Max Richter: Voices. Decca. $19.98 (2 CDs).
Here I Stand and other vocal music. iSing Silicon Valley.
Innova. $15.
Social consciousness, international focus,
a rethinking of what music is and what it means and how it is made – these and
more are the ingredients of new recordings that aim to explore our current
troubled times while giving listeners chances to hear sounds, both
unconventional and traditional, produced in ways intended to evoke a strong
emotional and/or intellectual response. These approaches represent a kind of
new focus in music, which makes it appropriate for New Focus Recordings to be
the name of a primary provider of discs of this type. World première recordings
of Chilean chamber music are the specific focus of a CD featuring violist
Georgina Isabel Rossi and pianist Silvie Cheng. The two works on the disc by
Rafael Díaz neatly encapsulate two elements of contemporary seekings after new
forms of meaning and expression. Will
There Be Someone Whose Hands Can Sustain This Falling? (that is the English
translation of the title) is for solo but amplified viola and is based on
prayer-songs of indigenous Andean people. It sounds, however, like a great deal
of modern music in the way it works against the basic tonal qualities for which
the viola is designed and known – its greater warmth and resonance compared
with the violin – and extends the instrument’s sound into regions in which it
is not fully comfortable, no matter how well-played. This is quite intentional
on Díaz’s part, because in his other piece here, In the Depths of My Distance Your House Emerges (again, the English
translation of the title), he skillfully uses the viola’s natural tonal beauty to
good purpose, and juxtaposes it with the piano in ways both effective and
moving. This work is intended as a throwback – a sound-image of an old memory
of walking to school – so its more-old-fashioned aural quality is surely
deliberate. And it comes across better in its six minutes than does the
amplified-viola work at almost twice that length. Carlos Botto’s Fantasia, Op. 15, also for viola and
piano, is more modern-sounding in its treatment of the viola and in its many
stylistic, rhythmic and tempo changes. Still another viola-and-piano piece, Dúo “Do not go gentle” by Federico
Heinlein, is determinedly dissonant and difficult to grasp structurally or
emotionally – with the result that it sounds like a great deal of contemporary
music created more for the composer’s benefit than for that of the audience. Also
here is Tololo for viola and string
orchestra, by David Cortés as arranged by Miguel Farías. This is a work
intended to reflect specific external, geographical sounds and landscapes but
coming across – like Díaz’s amplified-viola work – mostly as an exercise in
sonic combinations without apparent reference to anything in particular. The
only multi-movement piece here is Mobili,
Op. 63, for viola and piano, by Juan Orrego-Salas. It strikes a better
balance between overtly modernistic sound and the inherent warmth of the viola,
allowing some of the more-discordant material to be handled by the piano
instead of the stringed instrument. Singing qualities keep appearing in the
first movement, “Flessibile,” and are quite absent in the second, the
scherzo-like “Discontinuo.” The third and longest movement, “Ricorrente,” is
slow-paced, mostly quiet, and pays homage to the concept of lyricism without
ever quite producing any overtly lyrical thematic material. The finale,
“Perpetuo,” is the sort of perpetuum
mobile implied by its title, the viola here largely disjointed-sounding
while the piano perpetuates a degree of continuity beneath it. The disc
concludes with El Sampedrino by
Carlos Guastavino, as arranged for viola and piano by Kim Kashkashian and
Robert Levin, and this is a surprisingly effective conclusion in its warmth,
beauty and moderate pace. It is a gently insistent reminder that no matter what
today’s composers may choose to explore sonically, the inherent qualities of an
instrument such as the viola are ultimately more involving than any extension
or alteration to which the instrument may be subjected.
If all the composers on the Rossi/Cheng
disc draw inspiration, one way or another, from Chile, another New Focus
Recordings CD works in the opposite way, with a single composer pulling
inspiration from multiple sources and using a wide variety of instruments to
communicate his explorations. There is no doubting the cleverness of Richard
Carrick’s chamber works on this disc, but being clever does not equate to being
communicative: a lot of the music is of the “look how interesting this is”
variety, calling attention to itself through approach or instrumental
combination but not offering enough substantive content (in emotional or
pure-musical terms) to repay multiple hearings. La touche sonore sous l’eau for piano is vaguely French
Impressionistic in sound. The violin duos Phosphène
and Natural Duo focus on ascending
and descending glissandos, respectively – Carrick is fond of glissandos – and
are repetitive enough to seem drawn-out even though each lasts only two
minutes. At that, they are longer than une,
which juxtaposes flute and piano and, of course, lasts one minute. The flute solo lanterne
is seven times that length but wears out its welcome rather early, since again
it is largely driven by repetition. Sarang
Ga, for bass clarinet and piano, is conceptually more interesting, using
various Korean influences in a progression from the woodwind’s higher reaches
to its lower ones. It has an “experimental” feel to it, as if Carrick is trying
to see what he can do with this sort of material using instruments of this type
– without paying any particular attention to whether the piece conveys anything
meaningful to listeners. La Scène
Miniature is a more interesting instrumental blend, using flute, piano,
bass clarinet, and cello. It is supposedly inspired by Camus’ The Stranger, but does not seem to be
trying to extract anything in particular from that work. Then there is more
Korean influence in three pieces for various players: the very short Danga for cello and piano, the much more
extended Seongeum for solo violin,
and the oddly titled but very interestingly scored sandstone(s) for an ensemble that includes both Western and Korean
instruments and mixes them in some intriguing ways and to good effect. This is
the most distinctive work on the disc and the one in which Carrick appears to
show the greatest interest in audience communication, since he is at pains to
blend and contrast the different instruments and their distinctive sounds in
ways that will make listeners think about, and feel, the very dissimilar but
equally expressive nature of Western and Eastern musical thinking. The final
work on the disc is quite conventional in instrumentation. It is Space:Time – String Quartet No. 2, for
the usual four string players. But the music once again delves into
experimentation that is likely of interest to the performers, at the expense of
producing audience involvement. The movements are called “Claustrophobia,”
“Gravity,” “Space Travel,” and “Coda – ‘into the light,’” and each offers its
own form of compositional cleverness: lots of Carrick’s favored glissandi in the first, counterpoint at
various registers in the second, a palindrome in the third, and slow motion
beneath swelling sounds in the fourth. Listeners who bother to discover, before
hearing the quartet, what Carrick is intending to do, will find it far more
interesting than those who simply want to listen to it as music. In fact, that
is the case for much of the material here.
Max Richter’s intent in Voices, available as a new two-CD Decca
release, is concerned with audience
involvement – in fact, to so great a degree that the material is something of
an “auditory advocacy pamphlet” rather than music in any traditional sense.
Richter would likely be pleased to be told this is not “traditional” in musical
terms, having said that he uses music as a place that gets the audience to
think. But in fact that is scarcely unusual: at least as far back as Gregorian
chant and its intent to connect humans with divinity – and probably much, much
further back in time than that – music has had, as one of its purposes, the
forging of a connection between listeners and some higher ideal. Think only of
Beethoven’s Ninth or La Marseillaise.
Richter, however, places the pamphleteering aspect of music in the forefront:
there is little reason to listen to this release except to be guided (and presumably inspired) by it. The 10-movement
work is a collection of crowdsourced readings of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, an 1800-word United Nations document from 1949 that, in Richter’s
view, is so inspirational that it can point the way toward the solution of many
of the problems the world now faces. Whether that naïve belief suffices as the
foundation of nearly an hour of voices-plus-instruments – that is what Richter
offers in Voices – will be up to each
listener to decide. Richter complements the various words of the Declaration,
spoken in multiple languages, strictly with Western instruments, mostly strings
– an odd decision if one is seeking universality. Some sections of Voices get considerable instrumental
accompaniment and backup; others, such as the concluding “Mercy,” are much more
lightly scored (in that case, for violin, piano and keyboards). It goes without
saying that the project is extremely well-intentioned and is intended to bring
people together to solve problems that affect all residents of Planet Earth.
Richter’s sincerity should not be gainsaid. But his thought process can be. The
United Nations has 193 member states, and every single one has ratified at
least one of nine treaties that have been created on the basis of the
Declaration. That includes North Korea, Iran, Afghanistan, and China (now under
Communist rule – but it was a diplomat from what was then the Republic of China
who helped draft the Declaration). Furthermore, the Declaration has been
criticized since its inception as attempting to enshrine Western notions of
rights and impose them on the entire world – scarcely a recipe for comity in
the 21st century. Thus, Richter’s selection of this document as his
basis for creating cooperative musical advocacy is at best questionable. In
terms of music, Richter’s Voices is simply not very interesting or
compelling. It is a concept in search of an effective means of expression. What
is particularly intriguing about the recording is that the second CD offers the
same 10 movements without the voices
– presenting just the musical material. Listening to this disc proves to be a
very odd experience. Much of it sounds like “space-movie music” of the György
Ligeti kind, and the rest sounds like the simple accompaniment of
something-or-other. There is nothing captivating or even, in truth, particularly
interesting on the “voiceless mix” CD, which comes across as nothing more than
minimalist background music. Nothing in this two-hour presentation, with or
without voices, is likely to have even an iota of the effect of four words by
Schiller that Beethoven set: Alle
Menschen werden Brüder – “all men will become brothers,” or as we would now
say, “all people will be joined as a family.”
This certainly does not mean that voices lack the musical power to communicate ideas skillfully, or that music itself is inevitably ineffective in bringing people together. Like Richter, a choral group called iSing Silicon Valley has the avowed purpose of changing the world – but for this chorus, the way is gentler, less dogmatic and far more musically attractive than Richter’s material. The group’s first recording, an Innova CD, is a short (49-minute) collection of 11 works by composers of all sorts, from the distinctly classical (Claude Debussy) to the definitely popular (Pinkzebra). Five pieces here are iSing commissions and world première recordings: In Your Light and 365 by Daniel Elder, Never Shall I Forget by Adam Schoenberg, Birds’ Lullaby by Sarah Quartel, and this specific choir-and-piano arrangement of the 20-year-old Debussy’s Salut Printemps. The overall sequencing of the CD is well-thought-out – the juxtaposition, for example, of Norwegian composer Ola Gjeilo’s Ave Generosa with Elder’s In Your Light enhances the effectiveness of both pieces, and the charm of Bob Chilcott’s Like a Singing Bird is increased by following it with Quartel’s bird-focused piece. There are pleasantries throughout the recording, which also includes Only in Sleep by Ēriks Ešenvalds, Here I Stand by Karen Linford, Sing by Pinkzebra, and Grow Little Tree by Andrea Ramsey. The Ramsey piece is the last on the disc and in some ways the point of the whole thing: from little things, including the excellent vocalizing of a chorus such as iSing Silicon Valley, much greater ones can grow. The singing is in fact quite fine, and the accompanying instruments (pianos, string quartet, percussion and harp) are well-played and skillfully used to color the vocal lines, never to overwhelm or compete with them. The music itself is all attractive, and all of it sounds refreshing and sincere, even though some of the topics sung about (or hinted at) are on the darker side. But “change the world”? It is hard to see how this lovely set of performances holds the key to change beyond the cooperative endeavor that choral singing itself inevitably is. Just as Richter’s Voices is an overreach, almost a sort of well-meaning propaganda piece masquerading as a musical experience, so these effectively sung and mostly pleasant offerings by iSing Silicon Valley are just that – mostly pleasant – without coming across in any meaningful way as change agents. The members of iSing Silicon Valley, on the other hand, could become change agents – if they can bring the same camaraderie and focus to other aspects of life that are much in evidence in their performances here.
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