Stephen
Jaffe: Light Dances (Chamber Concerto No. 2); String Quartet No. 2 (Aeolian and
Sylvan Figures); Sonata in four parts.
Da Capo Chamber Players; Borromeo String Quartet; David Hardy, cello, with
Lambert Orkis, piano. Bridge Records. $15.99.
Beth
Mehocic: Piece by Piece; Somewhere Between D and C#; Concerto for Piano and
Orchestra; Left of Winter; Picasso’s Flight; Tango Concerto. Navona. $14.99.
David
Loeb: Five Fantasias for the Japanese Consort; Fantasia on a Rondeau of Dufay;
Chanson Malagache; Fantasia sobre ‘una Hija Tiene del Rey’; Yaku (Night
Crossroads); Arietta; Gaunkyo (Bridge to the Lingering Clouds); Between Sea and
Sky; Het Nieuwe Madrigaalboek.
Furious Artisans. $16.99.
Jake
Heggie: Eve Song; Songs and Sonnets to Ophelia; Camille Claudel—Into the Fire. Melissa Davis, soprano; Jerry Wong, piano. MSR
Classics. $14.95.
Contemporary composers are often especially careful to select specific
instruments or instrumental combinations that will reflect their thinking in
particular pieces and forms, and will produce sound worlds that express very
different thoughts and emotions while still reflecting their individual musical
styles. Listeners who enjoy recent classical or classically inspired works will
find CDs devoted to individual composers – but using a multiplicity of
instrumental combinations – especially interesting for showing how the
composers’ approach varies (or does not vary) depending on chosen sounds. For
example, a new Bridge Records release of the music of Stephen Jaffe (born 1954)
offers works for a chamber group, a string quartet, and a cello-and-piano duet.
Light Dances (Chamber Concerto No. 2)
is a pleasant three-movement assemblage of atonal but strongly rhythmic
(although not particularly danceable) material. Percussion, including piano,
produces much of the flavor of the work, especially in the middle movement; the
finale’s enthusiasm is especially welcome. Throughout, Jaffe uses the varying
tonal possibilities of the chamber ensemble to good effect. The sounds are
quite different in his five-movement String
Quartet No. 2 (Aeolian and Sylvan Figures), which uses the traditional
string-quartet ensemble but tends to treat the instruments individually more
than as a group. Jaffe is fond of evocative movement titles that may or may not
accurately reflect the music: in this work, “Muted Interlude” fits well,
“Scherzino Chickadee” less well, and “Homage to the Breath” surprisingly
effectively in a work without winds. Reducing the instrumental complement still
further, Jaffe’s Sonata in four parts
also offers titles intended to reflect the musical notes, among them
“Breathing, Still, Undulating” and “Strutting.” Jaffe here treats the
cello-and-piano combination as more of a cooperative endeavor than the strings
tend to be in the quartet, with the two instruments’ differing sounds and
ranges intermingling to good effect. This fourth volume of Jaffe’s music on
Bridge does a good job of showing how the composer approaches varying
instrumental groupings.
The instruments chosen by Beth Mehocic in the works on a new Navona CD
cover an even wider span, from a piano trio to a full orchestra plus piano,
accordion and bandoneon. In Piece by
Piece, Mehocic (1953-2022) produces an interestingly scored chamber work
(flute, bass clarinet, trumpet, bass trombone, violin, contrabass and
percussion) that never really goes anywhere but sounds quite good not getting
there. Somewhere Between D and C#,
for violin, cello and piano, is a musical interpretation or commentary on a
poem Mehocic wrote about being on the edge of here-or-there. Musically, it is
rather inconsequential, although here too the interplay of instruments is
well-handled. Concerto for Piano and
Orchestra (featuring pianist Charlene Farrugia with the Croatian Chamber
Orchestra conducted by Miran Vaupotić) is a large-scale work from early in
Mehocic’s career (it dates to 1974). In the traditional three movements, it is
unashamedly conventional tonally and somewhat reminiscent of Tchaikovsky in its
insistent percussion – all in all, a derivative piece that is nevertheless
well-made. Left of Winter is also for
orchestra (here, the Janáček Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Jiří Petrdlík)
but is a much later work, dating to 2014. Strongly martial – it was written as
a men’s dance about soldiers going off to war – it is suitably intense and
percussion-focused, and not at all celebratory. As occasional, programmatic
music, it is effective enough, although its overall sound is somewhat obvious
and overdone. Picasso’s Flight is for
string quartet and is not about the artist but about Mehocic’s African Grey
parrot and its struggles to fly gracefully (this type of parrot is not an
elegant flyer). This is strongly representational music that neatly indicates
the parrot’s struggles with airborne life – and even listeners who do not know
what the music is about can enjoy the skillful way that Mehocic combines and
contrasts the sounds of the four string instruments. The CD ends with Tango Concerto for orchestra (the Zagreb
Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Ivan Josip Skender) plus piano (Farrugia)
as well as accordion and bandoneon (Franko Bozac). Written in 2018, it is a
carefully balanced work – each of its three movements runs four-and-a-half
minutes – that treats the piano and accordion/bandoneon more as obbligato instruments than as full-scale
soloists. This gives the piece a pleasant level of intimacy, with Mehocic
writing more idiomatically for the piano than for the other instruments – which
provide a kind of exotic color but are not as fully integrated into the work as
is the piano. Even if Mehocic was not entirely comfortable with this specific
instrumental combination, though, she uses it mostly sure-handedly and retains
her career-long willingness to produce essentially tonal music that retains a
contemporary feeling through its rhythmic vitality and willingness to explore
instrumental effects thoroughly without trying to make performers produce
sounds beyond those of which their instruments are normally capable.
David Loeb (born 1939) also retains an essentially tonal orientation in
many works, but he likes to explore sounds beyond those typical of Western
instruments – and to do so, he sometimes turns to instruments from different
musical traditions. This is clear on a new Furious Artisans release featuring
nine Loeb works of varying length and from different compositional periods. The
Five Fantasias for the Japanese Consort
(1985-1993), played by the Yukimi Kambe Viol Consort, use scales and harmonies
of non-European musical cultures (Japan, Indonesia, India) to produce very
brief character sketches. Fantasia on a
Rondeau of Dufay (1978/2008) is for two guitars (Vilian Ivantchev and
Daniel Lewis), but the writing suggests lute music of the time of Guillaume Du
Fay (1397-1474). Chanson Malagache
(1996), for violin (Antonin Hradil) and orchestra (the Moravian Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by Ruben Silva), uses a Malagasy theme but explores it in
European ways, both older (Bach-like) and newer (à la Bartók). Fantasia
sobre ‘una Hija Tiene del Rey’ (1980) is an extended, indeed somewhat
overextended, solo-guitar work (played by Terry Champlin) that is based on a
Sephardic melody of Renaissance times – listeners to this CD will by now
realize that Loeb has a fondness not only for mixing styles but also for reinterpreting
and developing elements of the musical past in new ways. In Yaku (Night Crossroads), which dates to
1985, he also introduces a non-Western flute, the Japanese shinobue, having the
solo performer (Kohei Nishikawa) combine its sound with that of the Western
flute in various ways that show more of the instruments’ similarities than
their differences. Arietta (1986/2008)
is for violin (Sabena Torosjian) and guitar (Champlin), with the violin muted
throughout – the sound world here is one of gentleness and quietude in which
the instruments complement each other well. Gaunkyo
(Bridge to the Lingering Clouds) dates to 2001 and includes the Japanese
mouth organ called a sho (played by Mayumi Miyata), plus the Yukimi Kambe Viol
Consort. This work has the most unusual sound on the CD – an emphatic and at
times almost unpleasantly strident intensity contrasts with comparatively
gentle string tones. Between Sea and Sky
(1998), played by the Six Hands Guitar Trio, is another work in which Loeb
tries to illustrate a specific non-Western scene (a villa on Kyoto’s highest
mountain) by using traditional Western instruments (acoustic guitars) in ways
that accentuate some of the traditional elements of non-Western musical
expression. And the five-movement Het
Nieuwe Madrigaalboek (1983), played by the Netherlands Clarinet Quartet, is
another work showing Loeb’s interest in and absorption of music of the past:
its five very short movements evoke the feelings generated by Renaissance
madrigals without actually using tunes or instruments of that time.
One instrument frequently used by composers to produce very specific effects is the human voice – which is what Jake Heggie (born 1961) employs in three song cycles on an MSR Classics CD featuring soprano Melissa Davis and pianist Jerry Wong. Eve Song (2000) includes eight settings of texts by Philip Littell (born 1950). The songs range from the operatic (“My Name”) to the Broadway-show-like (“Good”) to the somewhat over-dramatic (“Snake”). Songs and Sonnets to Ophelia (1999) includes four pieces, the first using Heggie’s own words and the others setting texts by Edna St. Vincent Millay. A certain level of seasonal cyclicality is intended here, with the first song being “The Spring Is Arisen” and the last one “Spring.” The overall impression, enhanced by the piano’s comparatively modest contribution in underlining the words throughout the sequence, is one of gentleness and resignation. More ambitious and considerably longer (nearly 35 minutes), the eight-movement Camille Claudel—Into the Fire (2012), originally for mezzo-soprano and string quartet, uses texts by Gene Scheer (born 1958) exploring the life of the French sculptor (1864-1943). Claudel, who worked mainly in bronze and marble, became famous only after her death, but Scheer’s words and therefore Heggie’s cycle – several of whose songs are rather extended – focus mostly on her life and personality, not her work or its eventual recognition. The piano has greater importance in this cycle than in the others, introducing the entire sequence, doing considerable scene-setting throughout, and sometimes almost seeming to take on the role of a character in Claudel’s story (notably in “La Valse”). Familiarity with Claudel’s life and creations is a necessity for full understanding and appreciation of the vocal material. For example, “Rodin” is about her time as the older sculptor’s student and lover, and “Shakuntala” (usually spelled Sakuntala) refers to a sculpture made by Claudel in several versions from 1886 to 1905. The cycle’s final song refers both to Claudel’s 30-year confinement to the asylum where she died and to her relationship with Jessica Lipscomb, which dates to the time when they both worked in Rodin’s studio. Without an understanding of Claudel’s life and times, this extended exploration by Heggie will be an interesting instance of musical biography but not an especially distinctive use of the voice to create a sound world commensurate with its topic. Indeed, the piano, although it does not dominate the cycle, often seems to have more-interesting things to say than does the singer. Because piano and voice are used in different ways in the three song sequences on this disc, the CD, taken as a whole, does show Heggie’s skill at vocal writing and at using the voice-and-piano mixture to explore several topics in differing sonic environments.
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