Rhona
Clarke: Choral Music. State Choir
Latvija conducted by Māris Sirmais. Métier. $18.99.
Jonathan
Östlund: Vocal and Instrumental Music. Divine Art. $27.99 (2 CDs).
James
Cook: Excerpts from “Abishag” and “Jane the Quene.” Joanna Songi, soprano; Roberto Abate, tenor; Adam
Green, baritone; Paul McKenzie, piano. Diversions. $13.99.
Frederic
Hand: Music for Guitar. Frederic
Hand, guitar; Lesley Hand, vocals. ReEntrant. $16.99.
Topics and sounds of the past remain fascinating to contemporary
composers, perhaps especially so in the field of vocal music. And top-notch
vocal ensembles are as expert at bringing modern compositions to vivid life as
they are in singing older material. The first-rate, smooth-voiced State Choir Latvija
shows this clearly on a new Métier CD devoted to works by Rhona
Clarke (born 1958). And Clarke’s choice of material is equally clear in showing
how composers of today continue to interpret and reinterpret some material that
has fascinated musicians for many centuries. From the opening crescendo of the
first piece on the disc, O Vis
Aeternitatis (2020), Clarke proves herself adept at writing for massed
voices that are declaiming Latin texts with emotional engagement as appropriate
in the 21st century as in the far more traditionally religious times
hundreds of years ago. Indeed, Clarke’s Two
Marian Anthems (2007) use texts that listeners familiar with older vocal
music will know well: Regina Caeli
and Salve Regina. However, this does
not mean that Clarke always handles the texts in the expected manner. This is
especially true, for instance, in Ave
Atque Vale (2017), whose opening (and later repeated) drum stroke sets a
surprising, distinctly funereal tone that emphasizes the latter part of the
title phrase, “Hail and Farewell.” On the other hand, the Three Carols on Medieval Texts (2014) are set with the light
transparency that would be expected, aside from a few unanticipated dips into
gloom in the central Lullay, my Liking
(the other two are Glad and Blithe
and Make we Merry). The most-extended
work on this CD is a Requiem (2020)
that is not as extensive as most works of its type but still includes 20
minutes of heartfelt and particularly elegantly set versions of Introit, Lux Aeterna, Pie Jesu and In Paradisum. The combination of
evanescence and earthiness in this work fits the topic particularly well. The
five remaining pieces on the disc are shorter, self-contained, and generally
more secular. They are The Kiss
(2008), A Song for St. Cecilia’s Day
(1991), Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep
(2006), The Old Woman (2016), and Rorate Caeli (1994). In all cases,
Clarke’s settings fit the words well and allow the texts to come through
clearly; and the fine pacing and clarity of the choir under Māris Sirmais show the music in its best and
most-effective light.
Modern choral music, no matter how well composed and performed, is
something of a specialty item – and a new two-CD release on the Divine Art
label, featuring the music of Jonathan Östlund (born
1975), is even more so. That is because there is such a large amount of
material here – a true wealth of music for those already familiar with and
interested in this composer, but an overwhelming offering for most potential
listeners. The discs contain nearly two-and-a-quarter hours of material, and it
is of all types: choral, vocal, chamber, and orchestral. Sorting through all of
this music, much less listening to it in the order presented (the sequence is
essentially arbitrary), is a lot to ask of an audience; and the attempt to
bracket the material by sandwiching it between the brief Imago Theme at the start of the first disc and Imago Theme 2 at the end of the second is not particularly useful. To
the extent that there is any connection among these disparate works, it lies in
the way that Östlund uses and pays tribute to the past – a way quite
different from that used by Clarke. For one thing, Östlund frequently makes use of Impressionistic
techniques, employing instruments and voices to emotive effects that are
intended to elucidate scenes including La
Neige de Noël, Turquoise
Spring, Night of June, and Zephyr. For another thing, Östlund deliberately quotes from, paraphrases or
creates fantasias or variations on specific music of the past, from Bach’s Komm süßer Tod, Komm selge Ruh to
Reger’s Mariä Wiegenlied. This
element of Östlund’s approach is most clearly on display in the
seven-movement Bouquet (Suite for Two
Clarinets), which is a set of fantasias – on a Swedish folk song, Brahms’ Hungarian Dance No. 5, and Debussy’s Afternoon of a Faun, plus The Last Rose of Summer, two parts of
Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition,
and Tchaikovsky’s June. The mixing of
classical and folk music works well, thanks to the specific items chosen by Östlund and his way of delving into their expressive
potential. And in fact, a great many of the pieces heard here are inviting and
pleasant to listen to, staying firmly in a tonal universe and paying respectful
tribute to music of the past from a wide variety of sources, including several
from Östlund’s native Sweden. Listeners unfamiliar with Östlund may be pleasantly surprised at the
accessibility of his works and the consistent quality with which he produces
them. And all the performances, by a very large number of soloists and
ensembles, are engaging and effective. Nevertheless, this is a great deal of
material by a single contemporary composer, and one whose sensibilities tend
not to vary much from piece to piece. Therefore, for most audiences, this
recording will be far more enjoyable in small doses than as a start-to-finish
experience.
The experience is more or less opposite, at least temporally, on a
Diversions CD featuring excerpts from two operas by James Cook (born 1963).
This entire disc runs just half an hour – which will whet the appetite of
listeners who are favorably inclined toward contemporary opera composition, but
will be more than enough for those less interested in it. Cook’s music is
testimony to the continuing interest of some modern composers in the potential
intensity and over-the-top melodramatic possibilities of opera, a form once
memorably described by Franco Zeffirelli as “a planet where the muses work
together, join hands and celebrate all the arts.” The operas Abishag and Jane the Quene, however, are scarcely celebratory. The title
character in Abishag is a young woman
assigned to the Biblical King David to lie next to him and give him body heat,
since in his old age nothing else could warm him. She was not his concubine but
was regarded as one by some in the palace, the result being intrigue that, in
the book of Kings, led to the assassination of one of David’s sons. The three
excerpts from Abishag are the opening
and closing scenes and the brief David’s
Liebestod, all arranged for voice and piano. The opening is suitably
dramatic, the closing suitably quiescent, and David’s Liebestod is simply suitable to its topic. Jane the Quene is about Lady Jane Grey,
England’s “Nine Days’ Queen” in the 16th century. This too is a
story of intrigue and family drama, and one that does not end well for the
title character. The two excerpts on the CD are Gentle Mr. Aylmer, the reference being to an English bishop who
tutored Jane, and Love’s Farewell,
which is as gentle and wistful as would be expected from its title. There is
not enough material on this disc to judge the worth of the two operas
themselves, but there is enough to show that Cook knows how to handle various
vocal ranges and typical-for-the-stage operatic concerns.
The voice is expected in an opera recording, of course, but certainly not in one of guitar music. Yet there are three voice-and-guitar works on a CD on the ReEntrant label that features the music and playing of Frederic Hand (born 1947). These pieces – The Poet’s Eye, I Am, and There Is a Splendor – are nicely sung, or rather sung-and-declaimed – by Lesley Hand; and the unusual circumstance of classical-style writing for voice and guitar (as opposed to standard folksongs in which the guitarist does the singing) proves interesting, if not really more emotionally appealing than the rest of the CD, which is for guitar alone. The other works here are called Renewal, Ballade for Astor Piazzolla, The Passionate Pilgrim, Romantic Etude, A Waltz for Maurice, Simple Gifts, Trilogy, Late One Night, and Cooper Lake. Among them, Simple Gifts – Hand’s very perky arrangement of the simple Shaker tune well-known from Copland’s Appalachian Spring – is surprising in its counterintuitive approach to the material. A Waltz for Maurice is counterintuitive as well: it is scarcely danceable and is more of a reminiscence than anything else. Everything on the CD is brief, Trilogy being the longest piece because it is in three movements – marked Moderato, Gently, and Allegro. This work, whose final movement is the most interesting-sounding of the three, and Late One Night are the earliest works on the disc, dating to 1977. Renewal, Ballade for Astor Piazzolla, and The Passionate Pilgrim are the most recent pieces, dating to 2021. The gentleness of Renewal at the disc’s opening is reflected at the CD’s conclusion in Cooper Lake, a contemplative piece in which the guitar sings gently of peace. Hand plays his own music with considerable feeling and, not surprisingly, technique that matches the works perfectly, since he wrote them for himself to perform. Other classical guitarists will be especially enamored of this disc, in which the emotional capacity of the guitar is well-explored and is used to create a wide variety of moods and feelings. Non-guitarists will likely find less of interest here, although every work is at least intermittently interesting – this is another of those CDs that is better heard in several listening sessions than in a single start-to-finish one.
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