Debussy:
Images, Books 1 and 2; Estampes; Masques; D’un cahier d’esquisses; L’isle
joyeuse. Mathilde Handelsman, piano.
Sheva Collection. $20.
Van
Stiefel: Music for Guitar. Van
Stiefel, guitar. Panoramic Recordings. $16.99.
Schubert:
Piano Sonata No. 13 in A, D. 664; Czerny: Variations on a Theme by Rode; Robert
Schumann: Papillons; Noveletten, Op. 21—No. 8, Sehr Lebhaft; Clara Schumann:
Soirées musicales, Op. 6—No. 2, Notturno. Andrea Botticelli, fortepiano. Céleste Music. $18.
Music
for Snare Drum by Nina C. Young, Hannah Lash, Amy Beth Kirsten, and Tonia Ko. Michael Compitello, snare drum. New Focus Recordings.
$16.99.
Many composers have been intrigued by the ability of unusual instruments
to produce sonic palettes that would be useful for specific purposes, or would
provide a touch of previously unheard color to a piece – essentially, aural
special effects. Some composers’ experiments led to widespread adoption of the
instrument involved (Tchaikovsky and the celesta); others did not (Beethoven
and the panharmonicon). But sometimes composers stick with a tried-and-true
instrument and look for ways to have it express new thoughts, feelings and
sounds. That is what Debussy did in much of his Impressionistic piano music,
including the works presented in nicely nuanced interpretations by Mathilde
Handelsman on a new Sheva Collection CD. There is limpid beauty throughout the
recording, almost as if this is higher-class salon music designed for
background perception rather than active listening. Handelsman seems thoroughly
comfortable with all the works, which date to the years 1903-1907 and partake
of a sensibility that used to be called “effete” before that word became critical
rather than simply descriptive. Handelsman is especially good at lulling
listeners into a particular mood, usually a gentle and quiet one, and then
snapping them out of it – as she does with Mouvement
from the first book of Images in the
wake of the two prior, very relaxing pieces. Similarly, the delicacy of the
first and second movements from the second book of Images comes through very well – and the glimmering of Poissons d’or then provides very
effective contrast. All three movements of Estampes
are atmospheric and sensitively phrased, the gradations of their dynamics as
subtle as those of their rhythms. Jardins
sous la pluie offers particularly effective scene-painting. The three
individual works offered to complement the sets of Images and Estampes are
fine character pieces, all their technical challenges seeming to give
Handelsman not a moment’s pause. D’un
cahier d’esquisses is practically static in both tempo and temperament,
nicely placed between the somewhat hectic Masques
and the rhythmically complex L’isle
joyeuse. Handelsman is certainly a fine Debussy interpreter – but it is a
bit of a shame that this Sheva Collection disc contains nothing even slightly
out of the ordinary. Debussy did invent or refine piano sounds different from
those known in earlier times, but he did more than that. Hearing some of his
most-familiar works yet again is a pleasure, but Handelsman certainly has the
technical capacity to go a bit farther afield with Debussy’s music, and with other
Impressionistic works, if she so chooses.
Like the modern piano, the modern acoustic guitar can be used to produce
sounds beyond those normally heard from it – and like the Impressionists of the
early 20th century, some composers in the 21st have
figured out how to produce “characteristic pieces” designed to evoke particular
moods, places or emotions. That is what Van Stiefel tries to do with the 14
works on a new Panoramic Recordings CD. His interest, though, is less in the
expressiveness of the acoustic guitar itself than in ways to modify, layer,
expand and otherwise alter the instrument to produce aural experiences beyond
those available by simply sitting down with a guitar (as Handelsman does with a
piano) and presenting music directly from composer through performer to listener.
So the actual sound of Stiefel’s works on this disc is what will attract or
repel an audience – not the supposed evocation of everything from an object (Jewel Tree) to a feeling (Solace) to a state of being (Luminescence) to something paranormal (Clairvoyance). Stiefel is fascinated by
the technological capabilities of guitar supplementation and modification, but
less so by the notion of connecting emotionally with listeners who have only
the music itself to go on and are not aware of what went into creating it. The
pings and pops in King of Cups, the
distinct (but not distinctive) computer sounds of Memory Jug, the sostenuto
and reverb of Spirits – all are
certainly carefully thought through and carefully assembled, but they do not
reach out very far beyond being sonically intriguing in and of themselves.
Stiefel’s works here cover a wide spectrum of durations, from Acquiescence at a minute and a half to Harbor at nearly 11 minutes; but it is
difficult to see, or rather to hear, what is so fascinating that it needs
extended presentation, and what so clear or cogent that it can make its point
quickly and decisively. In many ways, the most-interesting piece here is the
final one, Ground, which is written
for no fewer than five guitars but retains a forward momentum and clarity of
communication that are superior to most elements of the other pieces on the CD.
In its contrast to those works, Ground
comes across as the aural equivalent of a breath of fresh air: after all the
alterations of guitar sounds and instrumental supplementation (electronic and
not) that has come before, there is genuine pleasure in simply hearing a guitar
grouping that does not aspire to be more than it is.
An instrument that was scarcely unusual in the early Romantic era but
that now sounds exotic enough to offer listeners a new perspective on familiar
music is the fortepiano. Like Handelsman on her CD, Andrea Botticelli on a new
disc from Céleste Music plays mostly well-worn repertoire, and
does so with sensitivity and more than a touch of élan. What makes this CD especially interesting,
though, is not so much the performances as what the performances are done on: a
recent replica of an 1830s Viennese fortepiano. Pianos were evolving rapidly in
the age of Schubert, Czerny, and Robert and Clara Schumann, only reaching their
modern, massive and sonorous form later in the 19th century – in
concurrence with the demands both of composer/pianists for greater range and
stronger sound (Alkan, Liszt) and of impresarios for instruments capable of
projecting to ever-larger concert venues and being used with ever-bigger
orchestras. Generally, the fortepiano was more delicate than what came later,
often having specialty pedals to allow evocation of particular sound qualities
(a system derived from the fortepiano’s direct predecessor, the harpsichord);
and with keys generally smaller, placed closer together and having less
vertical travel than those on a modern piano, fortepianos encouraged a level of
lightness and transparency among performers and composers alike. Because it is
the least-known work played by Botticelli, Carl Czerny’s Variations on a Theme by Rode (known as “La Ricordanza”) offers an
especially apt exploration of the fortepiano’s qualities. There is a distinct
difference in the tonal quality between the lower and upper ranges of the
instrument that Botticelli integrates skillfully into her performance: the
sound itself becomes an interpretative matter (again, in line with the
registration options of the harpsichord). Some of the trickier fingerings
required by Czerny fit the fortepiano particularly well – they would be more of
a reach (literally) on a modern piano. This piece is more “parlor music” than
profound, but it lies quite well on the instrument Botticelli uses and offers a
pleasant chance to engage with a less-familiar sound world. Botticelli also
does a fine job with the more-substantive fare here, especially the Schubert
sonata, which has lightness of texture and a fine flowing motion that
Botticelli communicates particularly well. There is intensity here, to be sure,
but it is kept in check by the inherent qualities of the fortepiano, with the
result that the sonata’s emotive sensitivity becomes its most salient
characteristic. The other pieces on the disc are, on the whole, lighter fare,
all sounding mild and agreeable enough, if no more consequential than they
would on any other keyboard instrument. They are pleasantries, and the pleasant
sound of the fortepiano fits them very well indeed. Hearing all this material
on fortepiano casts the works in a different light from that usually focused on
them in performance – a dimmer light, perhaps, but one that encourages
less-explored elements of their beauty to shine forth.
The fortepiano is a specialty instrument nowadays; other instruments – especially ones that, like those in the piano family, are percussion – also have specific, narrow roles to fill, and move outside their realm only very rarely. This means that when they do go beyond what is normal and expected for them, the result can be very striking indeed. Thus, when Carl Nielsen included an ad libitum section for the snare drum in the first movement of his Fifth Symphony, instructing the performer to interfere at all costs with the progress of the orchestra, he was doing something genuinely new and very surprising – and that symphony retains its power in part because of this very unusual snare-drum section. A contemporary snare drummer, Michael Compitello, tries to go on beyond Nielsen (without ever paying direct tribute to the Danish composer) by having four modern composers create works for solo snare drum – ones that explore the instrument in ways that are far from the norm for it. The result is a New Focus Recordings CD that is quite short, at 38 minutes, but quite extended at the same time, in terms of the result of so much solo-snare-drum material. The four composers deserve credit for even attempting compositions that would appear, on their face, to be so outlandish. By the same token, listeners deserve credit for sitting through this entire disc. It is full of intermittently interesting material but, as a whole, simply cries out “experimentation” as loudly as possible (even when the snare drum itself is being played quietly). Electronic delay and sonic alteration are important elements of Nina C. Young’s Heart.throb, which has nothing apparent to do with the heart or, for that matter, with throbbing. At 11-and-a-half minutes, it is the longest work here, although Tonia Ko’s Negative Magic is only 45 seconds shorter. Ko requires that the drum be tuned and retuned during her piece, thus changing its sound and allowing juxtaposition and contrast of material performed on different parts of the instrument. This mainly calls attention (again and again) to the reality that it helps, in a solo-snare-drum work, to make the piece sound as if it is not a solo. The shortest piece on the disc is Start by Hannah Lash, and it is also the most interesting work here, changing the drum’s sound not through tuning changes but through use of differing implements with which the drum is played. Nevertheless, this wears thin well before the almost-seven-minute work approaches its conclusion. The fourth piece here, which runs nine-and-a-quarter minutes, is Ghost in the Machine by Amy Beth Kirsten. This also uses varying implements to elicit sounds from the snare drum, but draws attention more to what the drum is played with than to the drum’s actual sound – although that, come to think of it, is not an entirely bad thing. There is an underlying sense of amusement, of esoteric fun, throughout this disc, and certainly people who play the snare drum will enjoy a great deal of the CD. It is, however, a bit much for everyday listeners to encompass, and it serves mainly, in the end, to confirm that the snare drum is not really a very good solo instrument – although it can be mighty impressive and striking when set against a full orchestra whose progress it is trying to impede.
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