Schumann: String Quartet No. 3; Caroline Shaw:
Three Essays; Shostakovich: String Quartet No. 9. Calidore String Quartet
(Jeffrey Myers and Ryan Meehan, violins; Jeremy Berry, viola; Estelle Choi,
cello). Signum Classics. $17.99.
Schumann: Frauenliebe und Leben; Fantasie in C;
Beethoven: An die ferne Geliebte. Kindra Scharich, mezzo-soprano; Jeffrey LaDeur,
piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Music for English Horn by Meera Gudipati, Hannah
Kendall, Faye-Ellen Silverman, Jeni Brandon, Karola Obermüller, Lisa Bielawa,
and Cecilia Arditto. Jacqueline Leclair, English horn. New Focus Recordings. $16.99.
The
highly personal nature of chamber music, with just a few instruments in tonal
conversation, can be an ideal conduit for emotional communication. Indeed, the
title of Sibelius’ 1909 string quartet, Voces
intimae (“inner voices” or “intimate voices”) is entirely fitting for a
very large number of chamber works. The interrelationship of spoken voices and
musical ones is foundational to a new Signum Classics CD featuring the Calidore
String Quartet, which calls the disc “Babel” and tries to use that title to
unify three disparate pieces. This does not actually work very well – the three
quartets here are insistently different, and the “Babel” reference, which
refers directly to one-third of the Caroline Shaw work, is a rather forced one.
However, the actual performances on the CD are very fine indeed, and if the overarching
theme does not quite work, the individual components of the disc come through
very effectively. Schumann’s String
Quartet No. 3 is given first. It is his final quartet, but where Schumann
is concerned, that is scarcely meaningful, since he wrote all three of his
works in this form in the summer of 1842, in one of his periodic bursts of
intense attention to a specific form that he would never revisit. The emotional
basis of the quartet appears with the two-note downward motif heard at its
start, generally thought to represent the composer’s beloved Clara. The
Calidore players present it with apt warmth and carry it through the movement
well; they are also particularly attuned (so to speak) to the slow, swaying Adagio variation in the second movement.
The challenging third movement, which ranges from the rhapsodic to the driven
and obsessive, is suitably disturbing here, and well-contrasted with the
generally jovial finale. This quartet “speaks” in many tongues, so following it
with the Three Essays, written for
the Calidore by Caroline Shaw (born 1982), makes sense, since the first “essay”
deals with the Tower of Babel and its prime mover, Nimrod. But musically, the
juxtaposition of Shaw with Schumann does not pay particularly rich dividends. Shaw’s
first “essay” has a few things in common with Schumann’s third movement in the
way Shaw’s work starts gently but soon unravels and fragments. But any
resemblance is at most superficial. And Shaw insists on making the rest of Three Essays very abstruse indeed. The
second “essay,” called “Echo,” is supposed to somehow reflect computer
programming in a specific language plus the echo effect of social media, while
the third, called “Ruby,” actually bears the name of a programming language and
is somehow supposed to connect that technological element with the gem. The
music has worthwhile elements throughout, but it will be of interest mainly to
those who know and understand its underlying references. On the other hand,
Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 9,
which dates to 1964, is directly and strongly communicative without any need to
impose a specific program or set of explanatory words on it. A lighter and
less-complex work than his previous quartet, No. 9 starts with a greater dose
of simple (well, fairly simple) humor than is usual in Shostakovich, retains a
degree of calm that carries over into the solemnity of the second movement, and
starts to sound truly characteristic of the composer only in the central Allegretto scherzando (all five
movements of the quartet are played without pause). The Calidore String Quartet
handles the biting and edgy material of this third movement particularly well,
and carries the sense of strangeness right into the Adagio that follows – which is in fact a strange movement,
especially with the pizzicato chords in its center. Shostakovich pretty much
sums up the first four movements in the fifth and longest, and here the
Calidore players do a particularly fine job with the material, whether it is
speeding along, having a folksy sound, hammering chordal passages at the
audience, bringing back the fourth movement’s pizzicato material, or seeking
(perhaps a better word is yearning) for greater positivity at the end. This Shostakovich
quartet is a kind of “Babel” in and of itself, and certainly these performers
handle the mercurial music with great skill and with excellence both in solo
passages and in ensembles. Although the CD does not quite coalesce around its
supposed overall theme, it does offer some absolutely first-rate playing
throughout.
Music by Schumann also dominates an MSR
Classics disc featuring Kindra Scharich and Jeffrey LaDeur – and here the
conversational elements of the music are made especially apparent by the
inclusion of a human voice in one of the Schumann works and in the Beethoven
song cycle that is also offered by the performers. The three works here, for
all their substantial differences, have a distinct musical element in common:
the sixth and final song in Beethoven’s An
die ferne Geliebte, titled Nimm sie
hin denn, diese Lieder, is directly quoted by Schumann both in the sixth
song of his cycle and within the Fantasie in C. Presumably this
connection is what led Scharich and LaDeur to mix these otherwise somewhat
ill-assorted (if very beautiful) works on the same disc. As with the Calidore
String Quartet’s “Babel” attempt, the concept is fine, if somewhat forced; but
what makes the Scharich/LaDeur recording worthwhile is simply the quality of
the performances. Frauenliebe und Leben,
another of the musical love letters from Schumann to Clara, is a
still-affecting eight-song cycle that traces the life and love (one great love)
of a woman. This is music that ranges from hopefulness to exaltation to anger
and resentment at the end, when the man leaves the woman a widow and the music
has her fading into the background, with the entire cycle concluding only on
the piano – which reprises the opening song. This is a wonderful touch that
would lead beautifully into the Fantasie,
but instead this disc has the Schumann songs succeeded by Beethoven’s. It is an
odd arrangement: placing Beethoven first would work better (his songs are the
earliest music and are the ones quoted by Schumann), as would having the piano
at the end of Schumann’s cycle pick up the Fantasie
on its own, but neither of those approaches is the one chosen here. In any
case, the Beethoven cycle is one of his most proto-Romantic works, filled with
longing and desire for an unreachable love and building to that final and
longest song urging the beloved to “take then these songs” as tokens of a love
that loses nothing in intensity despite its distance. Then, after the Beethoven, LaDeur performs the Fantasie, which is actually longer than either of the song cycles.
The performance is well-considered and often eloquent, exploring the work’s
contrasting moods with considerable skill and clearly building toward the
sublimity of the finale – which, like the final songs by both Schumann and
Beethoven, is a capstone for the music and a summation of all the feelings it
has been evoking. The fine singing and playing on this disc are its primary
attractions, although it may be best to listen and respond to the three works
separately to obtain their full effect, rather than hearing them in a sequence
that somewhat undermines their individual power and meaning.
No matter how much introspection is musically possible among four performers or between two, there is nothing more intimate than material written for a single player – such as the works for solo English horn on a new disc from New Focus Recordings. These seven contemporary pieces, ranging in length from three minutes to 10, add up to a very short CD (40 minutes) that nevertheless offers more solo-English-horn music than most listeners are likely to have heard at any one time. Jacqueline Leclair covers considerable emotional territory on the disc. Ray of Hope by Meera Gudipati (born 1993) contrasts the English horn’s lower and higher ranges. Joe by Hannah Kendall (born 1984) focuses more on its lower range and its sinuous capabilities. Layered Lament by Faye-Ellen Silverman (born 1947) uses one of those “electronic impressions of space” backgrounds and a variety of techniques that exploit rather than explore the English horn’s capabilities. In the City at Night by Jenni Brandon (born 1977) has a bluesy feeling and a sense of yearning and loneliness – which the English horn is well-suited to express – while different forms of phosphorus (the title is all lowercase) by Karola Obermüller (born 1977) requires precise and extended breath control to convey a series of rather foghorn-like sounds. Synopsis #10: I Know This Room So Well by Lisa Bielawa (born 1968) is brief and effective in the way it mixes lyricism with a sense of uncertainty. The disc concludes with Música invisible by Cecilia Arditto (born 1966), which is one of those “listen to how clever I am” pieces using electronically modified vocal and other sounds and not really having anything to do with the English horn at all – a point it makes in just a few seconds and then keeps making for more than five minutes. Leclair handles everything on the disc with skill and (where permitted) warmth, and the CD as a whole very definitely shows the varying capabilities of the English horn and the differing ways in which contemporary composers use what is essentially an extended oboe (about 50% longer than the oboe itself and pitched a fifth lower). If none of the individual pieces is especially memorable, the combination of them all makes the CD an unusual one and a worthy exploration of one of the musical world’s less-prominent instruments.
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