Rising
w/The Crossing: Music of David Lang, Joby Talbot, Ēriks Ešenvalds,
Dietrich Buxtehude, Paul Fowler, Alex Berko, Ted Hearne, and Santa Ratniece. The Crossing conducted by Donald Nally. New Focus
Recordings. $16.99.
Jaap
Nico Hamburger: Chamber Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2. Ensemble Caprice conducted by Matthias Maute (No. 1);
Orchestre Métropolitain de Montréal
conducted by Vincent de Kort (No. 2). Leaf Music. $18.99.
Jaap
Nico Hamburger: Piano Concerto.
Assaff Weisman, piano; Orchestre Métropolitain
de Montréal conducted by Vincent de Kort. Leaf Music.
$13.99.
Even in times less fraught with fear and death than the pandemic-riddled
year of 2020, music can be an anodyne for existential angst and a soothing
counter to the unending (and decidedly unmusical) drumbeat of worry, trouble
and trauma. Rising w/The Crossing, a
compilation of a dozen of the Philadelphia-based vocal ensemble’s live concert
recordings, is designed for uplift and may well be a source of it for the
singers themselves, although that does not necessarily translate into an equally
positive experience for listeners. The highly intriguing opening track on this
New Focus Recordings disc shows why: it is David Lang’s fascinating exploration
of the flu pandemic that started in 1918, juxtaposing texts from a government
document of the time with the names of Philadelphians who died from the
disease. Called protect yourself from
infection (Lang eschews capital letters in his titles), the work has the
chorus saying “don’t get hysterical” and “beware of those who are coughing and
sneezing” and “avoid crowded streetcars” and “walk to the office if possible,”
all those phrases and others interspersed with names of the dead. The parallels
between the advice of a century ago, when antibiotics and antivirals were
nonexistent, and the similar recommendations of today, is eerie rather than
reassuring, the message more one of how little things have changed than one of
“we got through that and we will get through this.” The work is quite
well-written but misfires badly if its intent is reassurance. Also on the disc
are two Lang works from what he calls the
national anthems. They are I. our
land with peace and IV. keep us free.
Again, the intent seems to be one of solidarity, showing that many nations
share similar wishes and goals; but the effect is somewhat different, given
words such as “we fight for peace” and music that ranges from the simplistic to
the angular and rather intense. The entire disc inspires decidedly mixed
emotions. The two most-calming works on it are ones that do not fit what The
Crossing, a contemporary-music ensemble, usually does. They are Ad genua and Ad latus from Dietrich Buxtehude’s Membra Jesu nostri, and they have a simplicity, elegance and heartfelt
sense of belief that combine to offer a true vision of hope – even if their
religious context is less integral to life today than it was in Buxtehude’s
time. One other composer heard on the disc is represented by more than a single
work: Ēriks Ešenvalds, who contributes Translation
and Earth Teach Me Quiet. The first
of these, a chorale, fits well with the Buxtehude excerpt that it precedes. The
second, a more-layered choral work with a sense of upward motion as well as
quietude, follows the second Buxtehude work and also fits it well. Also on the
CD are Lost Forever by Judy Talbot, a
quiet and rather insistently depressive piece; First Pink by Paul Fowler, an expressive but fairly dour memorial
work; Lincoln by Alex Berko, with
disconnected words and phrases taken from an inscription at Washington National
Cathedral but here rendered less than fully coherent; What It Might Say by Ted Hearne, another work written mostly in
unison and mostly in melancholy fashion; and Horo horo hata hata by Santa Ratniece, which is filled with audio enhancements
and alterations that undermine rather than improve the sound of The Crossing
and which goes on much too long – lasting 10 minutes, it is the longest work on
the 71-minute disc. As a whole, the CD shows the excellence of The Crossing as
an ensemble and of Donald Nally as its conductor; but the “rising” theme of the
disc’s title, although often reflected in the way the music is constructed,
does not come through particularly well in terms of the words and meanings of
most of the pieces.
The intent of the two chamber symphonies by Canadian composer Jaap Nico
Hamburger (born 1958) is not so much emotional or spiritual elevation as it is
simple remembrance and the emotional qualities accompanying it. The first
chamber symphony is called “Remember to Forget,” a phrase from the Old
Testament designed to encourage people to move beyond troubles and errors
instead of dwelling on them. A two-movement work – slower, then faster – it is
inspired by the music of György Ligeti (1923-2006) and shows
sensitivity to some of Ligeti’s coloristic effects. But it is not particularly
convincing on its own terms – although the rhythmic abruptness of the Vivace comes across better than the
rather bland Andante. The second
chamber symphony is called “Children’s War Diaries” and refers to World War II,
with each of its five movements given a different date: May 1940, May 1941, May
1943, May 1944, and February 1945. Although entirely instrumental, the work was
inspired by five diaries of teenagers who did not survive the war. Here the
music is less avowedly tied to the work of previous composers and has more of
an individual voice. The extent to which it reflects each of the young victims’
writings is impossible to know, however. The first and second movements are
written in fairly straightforward contemporary style; the third is far more
directly emotive and includes some searching solo-violin material; the fourth
mostly sounds like a quiet, resigned sonic palette; and the effects-laden fifth
(percussion, pizzicati) is more
troubled than triumphant. The movements are quite short, ranging from
one-and-a-half to four-and-a-half minutes, and their impressions, although not
really surface-level, disappear rather quickly. Indeed, this entire Leaf Music
disc lasts only 32 minutes, and will likely be a worthwhile purchase only for
listeners already familiar with and interested in Hamburger’s music or in
modern Canadian classical material: although born in the Netherlands, Hamburger
has lived and worked in Canada since 2000.
Another Leaf Music disc of Hamburger’s music is even shorter: a mere 22 minutes. This one contains only the composer’s three-movement Piano Concerto, a work in which slow development is the primary impression: the first movement is Adagio, the third Molto Adagio, and only the second, Molto Allegro, offers livelier material. That second movement has Tchaikovskian elements in the handling of the piano and orchestra, but its overall impression is of somewhat warmed-over Prokofiev or Shostakovich. There are hints of sarcasm and poignancy, but little overall sense of bite. As for the slow outer movements, the first is primarily static, with some of the effect of small waves gently lapping at a shoreline; the third includes various solo-instrumental touches and a generalized sense of mystery, but it does not build to anything in particular and does not use the solo instrument in any especially satisfying way. The performances are quite fine on both Hamburger discs, but if Leaf Music really wanted to promote the material, it would have done much better to put everything on a single CD – which would still have run only 54 minutes – and perhaps have included some additional material to show other aspects of Hamburger’s work and abilities. As is, these recordings are really only for a very limited audience that is committed to the composer and/or contemporary Canadian classical material, and is willing to pay to subsidize the recording of works of this type.
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