Metamorphoses:
Arrangements of works by Bartók, Chopin,
Debussy, Mahler, Mendelssohn, Ravel, and Rachmaninoff. Maiburg Ensemble (Anette Maiburg, flute; Pascal
Schweren, piano; Matthias Hacker, double bass; Fethi Ak, percussion). Ars
Produktion. $19.99 (SACD).
Grieg:
Sonata No. 3 for Violin and Piano; Janáček: Sonata
for Violin and Piano; Dvořák: Mazurek. Shea-Kim Duo (Brandan Shea, violin; Yerin Kim,
piano). Blue Griffin Recordings. $15.99.
Richard
Strauss: Le bourgeois gentilhomme—Orchestral Suite; Milhaud: Le carnaval d’Aix;
Britten: Young Apollo; Gerald Finzi: Eclogue. Joshua Pierce, piano; Slovak State Chamber Orchestra of Zilina and
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra of Bratislava conducted by Kirk Trevor. MSR
Classics. $14.95.
A fascinating foray into arrangements that tread the line between
classical music and other forms – and frequently cross that line with a great
deal of panache and considerable interpretative skill – the new Ars Produktion
disc featuring the Maiburg Ensemble is above all a celebration of intimate
musical communication among four performers whose instruments, on the face of
it, seem more likely to conflict than to cohere. Lower Rhine Musical Festival Artistic
Director Anette Maiburg actually has even more-elaborate arrangements and
rethinkings of some of this music for the festival itself – Rachmaninoff’s Vocalise, for instance, comes with a
dance component. But even without the visuals, the cleverness and sensitivity of
the musical thought here come through clearly, although certainly not in a way
at which purists will nod with immediate approval. As flautist, Maiburg often
dominates on this SACD, although she herself has actually arranged only one of
the 14 works on the disc, Ravel’s Kaddisch
(the other arrangements are by Christoph König and Maiburg Ensemble pianist
Pascal Schweren). Yet “dominates” is not quite the right word for so collegial
an enterprise: even when the flute is front-and-center, it is clear that the
piano, double bass and percussion are equally crucial. This ensemble is closer
to a jazz quartet than anything traditional in classical music, and indeed,
many of the arrangements bespeak familiarity with and love for the jazz idiom.
This is particularly clear in several Romanian folk dances by Bartók, done in
something approaching “swing” style – but surprisingly, it is also apparent in
the unexpected arrangement of Debussy’s Syrinx
(here retitled Syrinx Reloaded),
which retains the feeling of the original but employs harmonies that would seem
to throw the music off-kilter if they were not handled with such consummate
skill in blending. Six Bartók dances make him the dominant composer here, but
in truth, it is the ensemble itself rather than any individual composer that
dominates the disc, which includes a Mendelssohn Scherzo, an additional Ravel work (L’enigme éternelle, its exoticism emphasized in this arrangement),
a brief foray into Chopin (here called Frédéric’s
Dance), a traditional Armenian dance called Hov Arek, and, of all things, the Adagietto from Mahler’s Symphony No. 5. The very wide selection of
repertoire certainly shows the Maiburg Ensemble’s boldness and willingness to
tackle unexpected material in often-clever ways. But not everything here is
equally convincing – the Mahler, in particular, is arranged to emphasize the
music’s dreamlike qualities, but in so doing robs the material of some of its
heartfelt elegance (not to mention its context). As a showcase for beautiful
small-scale performances that sensitively combine genres, this release is a
pleasure. Listeners who already know the original versions of the repertoire
will find these new ways of arranging and performing the material especially
engaging. Nevertheless, this is a specialized disc, not one that will attract
an audience seeking authenticity or careful attention to the music as written –
and the recording may not stand up particularly well to repeated hearings,
except for people for whom the pleasures of the Maiburg Ensemble’s performance
camaraderie come through with particular intensity.
The music offered by Brendan Shea and
Yerin Kim on a new Blue Griffin Recordings CD stays firmly within the realm of
classical chamber music, and the close-knit performances are as expressive as
one could hope for in these works. Except for the Dvořák Mazurek, a popular display piece heard often as an encore, the
works are not especially well-known, but Shea and Kim make a good case for
them. The most-substantial piece here is Grieg’s third violin-and-piano sonata
– which is in many ways his least “Griegian” work in this form. The mostly
sunny Sonata No. 1 and significantly darker No. 2 both date to the 1860s, while
the third sonata was composed 20 years later and was actually Grieg’s final
work composed in sonata form. It is a large-scale three-movement piece that
fits more firmly into the German Romantic tradition than do the earlier sonatas
or many other works by Grieg: it has some ties to Norwegian folk material, but
they do not leave a significant lasting impression. Shea and Kim get the broad
scale of the sonata right, and are particularly effective in the intense first
movement (marked Allegro molto ed
appassionato); they are, however, rather less attentive to the espressivo element of the second
movement, which accordingly does not balance the emotions of the first as
effectively as it can. The bright elements of the finale come across well, although
the cantabile second theme is another
element whose expressiveness is underplayed. The overall performance is a bit
on the staid side, although the playing is first-rate throughout. The only
violin sonata by Janáček is more interesting. It is an odd work, the first two
of its four movements having very similar moods and moderate tempos, the fourth
movement on the slow-and-dissonant side (it is marked Adagio), and the third movement (Allegretto) featuring some genuinely striking string swirls and
piano chords that give this shortest of the sonata’s movements the work’s greatest
emotional punch. Shea and Kim are at their best here when conveying the turbulence
and uncertainty of the material, and there is enough of that to make the
overall reading an effective one. But it is the shortest work here, the Dvořák Mazurek, that really seems to resonate
with these performers: it opens rather than closes the CD, and it is played
with such verve and style that it creates an expectation for the remainder of
the music that these interpretations never quite fulfill. It is also odd that
the disc has such a short running time: just 47 minutes. There is plenty of room
on it for, say, one of Grieg’s two earlier violin-and-piano sonatas.
The longest work on an MSR Classics release featuring pianist Joshua Pierce and conductor Kirk Trevor dates to the same time period as the Janáček sonata, which was written in 1914: Richard Strauss’ suite Le bourgeois gentilhomme includes music composed between 1911 and 1917. Strauss is not thought of as a composer of delicate music or works inviting intimate performance collaboration, but Le bourgeois gentilhomme is unusual Strauss, with two movements tied directly to Jean-Baptiste Lully and more-delicate scoring in several places than is typical of Strauss. Pierce and Trevor prove fine collaborators here, each deferring to the other as appropriate, almost like two courtiers bowing to each other in turn in the execution of an elaborate, dancelike ritual. The other extended work on this CD, Milhaud’s Le carnaval d’Aix, also fares well. Milhaud labeled this a “fantaisie pour piano et orchestre,” but even though Milhaud created the work for himself as pianist, it is less a showpiece of virtuosity than a pleasant, often sweet, sometimes gently self-parodistic set of 12 balletic movements, only three of which reach as much as two-minute length. This is a fine opportunity for a pianist to collaborate with an ensemble instead of competing with or trying to overwhelm one. Here as in the Strauss, Pierce and Trevor achieve a very well-balanced and sensitive reading, with the Slovak State Chamber Orchestra of Zilina sounding as good in accompaniment as it does when front-and-center. The group’s strings also do well with Britten’s Young Apollo, a work that sounds in the main like chamber music despite the larger string complement it requires. Pierce manages to be both the focus of the material and a kind of first-among-equals chamber musician both here and in Eclogue by Gerald Finzi (1901-1956), for which the ensemble is the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra of Bratislava (also conducted by Trevor). Finzi originally planned this as the slow movement of a concerto, so it would be reasonable to expect greater prominence for the piano than the work in fact offers. This is delicate music that seems to ruminate on themes presented with a kind of unassuming gentleness – it is pleasant rather than profound. Actually, that is a fairly apt description of all the works on this disc: nothing here delves deeply into feelings or emotions (except, to some extent, Britten’s Young Apollo). Both Pierce and Trevor make the unassuming superficiality of the material as attractive as it can be, and listeners who are interested in this specific combination of 20th-century works will find much to enjoy in the congenial way Pierce and Trevor handle the repertoire.
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