Haydn:
Symphony No. 103; Theresienmesse.
Mary Bevan, soprano; Catherine Wyn-Rogers, mezzo-soprano; Jeremy Budd, tenor; Sumner
Thompson, baritone; Handel and Haydn Society conducted by Harry Christophers.
CORO. $18.99.
William
McClelland: Songs. Krista River,
mezzo-soprano; Thomas Meglioranza, baritone; Alex Guerrero, tenor; Robert May,
Margaret Dudley, Thomas McCarger, and Suzanne Schwing, narrators; Donald Berman
and Blair McMillen, piano; David Enlow, organ; New York Virtuoso Singers
conducted by Harold Rosenbaum. Naxos. $13.99.
György Kurtág: Einige Sätze aus den Sudelbüchern Georg
Christoph Lichtenbergs; Katherine Balch: Phrases; John Aylward: Tiergarten;
Emily Pretorius: Immensity Of.
Departure Duo (Nina Guo, soprano; Edward Kass, double bass). New Focus
Recordings. $16.99.
Daniel
Carr: Nine Bethany Swann Songs; Vocalise; Piano Trio. Mindy Ella Chu, mezzo-soprano; Benefic Piano Trio
(Misha Vayman, violin; Cello [Qiele] Guo, cello; Sunhwa Kim, piano). MSR
Classics. $14.95.
The fascinatingly quirky – and revelatory – series of releases mixing
Haydn’s symphonies with his Masses, performed by the Handel and Haydn Society
under Harry Christophers and released on the CORO label, continues with a
pairing of the “Drum Roll” symphony with the Theresienmesse. Like previous similar releases – Symphony No. 99
with the Harmoniemesse, Symphony No.
100 with the Nelson Mass – this CD
sheds new light both on the choral work and on the instrumental one, without
attempting to draw unwonted (and unwanted) parallels between them. The high
skill level of these period-sensitive performances is pretty much a given –
Christophers is one of the world’s best conductors of music from this time
period, and the Handel and Haydn Society has existed since its founding (1815)
with a focus on repertoire of this sort (at the time, the society’s name
referred to “old” music [Handel’s] and “new” music [Haydn’s]). The Theresienmesse, the fourth of six that
Haydn composed for the name-day of the wife of Nicolaus II, Prince Esterházy,
got its title because a copy was acquired for the library of Empress Marie
Therese. Like all these Masses – written more than a decade after Haydn stopped
producing symphonies – the work has characteristics all its own: it is
primarily intimate and lyrical; it uses clarinets rather than oboes; and Haydn
reserves a special surprise for the start of the Agnus dei, which is sung in loud unison rather than the far more
common hushed gentleness. This Mass also includes a textual error, indicating
that Haydn probably set the words from memory: in the Credo, the words et in unum
Dominum Jesum Christum filium Dei unigentium are omitted altogether – with
the music, unsurprisingly, not missing a beat (literally) due to their absence.
The first-rate performance here is complemented by a rendition of Symphony No.
103 that plays games with the opening-movement timpani roll from which the work
gets its title. Haydn did not indicate exactly how the drum roll should sound,
or at what volume, and Christophers takes the liberty of having timpanist
Jonathan Hess create a sit-up-and-pay-attention, loud and rhythmic bit of
ebullience that takes the famous Paukenschlag
of Symphony No. 94 several steps further. And when the drum roll reappears toward
the end of the movement, it sounds very different, creating an
even-more-unexpected experience for the audience. Details like this are
characteristic of Christophers’ thoughtful approach to all these Haydn
releases, as is the excellent, historically informed orchestral playing
throughout the symphony (and in the Mass as well). More than two centuries
after its founding, the Handel and Haydn Society still does its “new music”
namesake proud.
Choral music retains its fascination for many composers right up to the
present day, and so do other vocal forms that are now “new music” but that clearly draw on the past. A Naxos CD
featuring world première recordings of numerous vocal
works by William McClelland (born 1950) offers insight into the way some
contemporary composers use vocal material to enhance emotional connections with
listeners. There are 18 pieces with voice here and, midway through the recording,
as if offering a brief refresher between courses, there is the solo-piano work Five for Piano (2006), which evokes
poetry in each movement but is wordless. The sensitivity of these little bits
of pianistic expressiveness, played pleasantly by Blair McMillen, reflects the
care with which the vocal works on the disc are created and performed. The
most-elaborate setting here is Cædmon’s
Hymn (2018), using the text of an Old English poem that is attributed to
Cædmon as his only known surviving work. McClelland ingeniously uses four
separate narrators, along with organ and chorus, to put forth what is
essentially a simple, brief poem in praise of God. The use of fairly
substantial performance forces does not overweight the poem’s sentiments,
thanks to the judicious way McClelland employs narrative and song alike – and
although the music lasts more than nine minutes, it does not seem overly
stretched out. Another choral work here, Hail
Lovely and Pure (2011), is even more extended: at 13-and-a-half minutes, it
is the longest piece on the CD. This is strictly a choral work, one that shows
McClelland’s skill at disposition of the full chorus and of sections within it.
The only other choral piece heard here reaches back even further in time than Caedmon’s Hymn. It is These Last Gifts (2015), for tenor and
chorus, and is based on the Roman poet Catullus’ heartfelt elegy after the
death of his brother. Here too the choral setting is notable for its emotional
expressiveness, which is never overdone but is always effective in putting
across depth of feeling. The remaining pieces on the disc are for single voice
(mezzo-soprano or baritone) and piano, and are mostly settings of works by
American poets. The female voice is given Autumnal
(2005), Poem Composed in Sleep
(1997), Sea Rose (2002), Insomnia (1987), Memory of Summer Facing West (1975), Garden Abstract (2008), and To
One Who Revisited an Old Garden (2005). The male voice sings Autumn 1964 (1995), Going (1993), Labrador
(1990), Storm (2011), The Fields of November (2013), The Defective Record (2005), Snowstorm in the Midwest (1989), and The Politician (1998). Although written
during a period of more than 40 years, the songs all share elements of careful
construction and devotion to evoking the emotions behind the words, with the
piano underlining passages of particular strength or import. McClelland is here
shown to be a composer for voice whose considerable skill shows not only in his
choice of material but also in the adept way he crafts music that both illuminates
and enhances the meaning of the words.
What McClelland is not is
avant-garde – that adjective applies much more clearly to the composers heard
on a New Focus Recordings release featuring the highly unusual performance
combination of soprano and double bass. “Quirky” describes this disc as clearly
as it does the Haydn symphony/Mass combinations, but to very different effect:
there is no way that this music, a little of which goes a long way, will appeal
to a wide audience – but it will be very appealing indeed to those seeking to
experience forms of composition and sonic display that frequently border on the
weird. There is nothing particularly new about mixing very high musical
elements with very low ones – for example, part of the exceedingly strange
effect of Alkan’s Chanson de la folle au
bord de la mer comes from doing this on the piano, and Alkan thought of it
in 1844. Nevertheless, the mixing of soprano vocal parts with a solo double
bass is not one most audiences will have heard, and it creates odd and at least
intermittently effective aural landscapes in all four of the works on this
disc. Those landscapes do not bear particularly long visits, though: even at
only 51 minutes, the CD as a whole is a bit much. But, interestingly, its longest
work – György Kurtág’s Einige Sätze aus den
Sudelbüchern Georg Christoph Lichtenbergs – is the one that most involves listeners and best
repays attention. That is because this piece, “Some Sentences from the
Scrapbooks of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg,” a physicist well-known in the 18th
century, includes no fewer than 42 tiny movements, half of them being settings
by Kurtág of Lichtenberg’s aphoristic thoughts, the other half
being English-language readings offered by Nina Guo and Edward Kass immediately
prior to each piece – allowing English speakers to hear just what points
Lichtenberg was making and to figure out how effectively Kurtág turned the thoughts into music in his 1996 work. This
is a wonderful approach that generates real anticipation for hearing the
musical settings. “A gourmand: he could pronounce the word ‘succulent’ in such
a way that upon hearing it one believed one bit into a ripe peach.” “Steeple:
upside-down funnel to lead prayer to Heaven.” “Audacity: he wasn’t ashamed,
even ex officio.” “The good tone: the
good tone is there, an octave lower.” “Effort in vain: blushing in the dark.”
These scrapbook notes (published posthumously) are not deep thinking or greatly
revelatory, but they are kernels of contemplation or amusement that Kurtág sets with considerable skill and a sure
understanding of the capabilities of voice and double bass (both sometimes at
their extremes). The remaining works on this (+++) CD, however, are not at this
level. Phrases by Katherine Balch
features standard-sounding screechiness from voice and instrument alike, its
four short movements (not as short as the individual elements of Kurtág’s work) quickly outstaying their welcome through
repetition and preoccupation with sonic oddities for their own sake. Tiergarten (“Zoo”) by John Aylward is
not a complete menagerie but a study of three creatures: swan, panther and
unicorn. Here too is a composer considering the words (in German) not as
vehicles for expression but as building blocks of sound-for-sound’s-sake – the
extended hiss of “s,” for example, and the pervasive atonal Sprechstimme, and the click of the
consonants, all mixed with double-bass groans and shivers. Finally, Immensity Of by Emily Praetorius is a
work of long (very long), slow (very slow) expression, voice and instrument
alike spinning individual phrases out and out and out with occasional
intercessions of brief contrasting sounds. The piece is effective tone-painting
in its own way, but is about twice as long as it needs to be to make its point:
its nine minutes seem much longer, while the 21 minutes of Kurtág’s work seem to zip by. This disc as a whole will be
a treat for listeners enamored of unusual contemporary vocal material, although
it is unlikely to reach (or reach out to) a wider audience.
Two Daniel Carr pieces “for High Voice, Violin, Cello and Piano,” heard on a (+++) MSR Classics disc of world première recordings, are also for specialized tastes. The Nine Bethany Swann Songs were composed in reverse, as it were: Carr wrote the music and then Swann created texts to go with the notes. Carr (born 1972), like McClelland, offers settings where the words are paramount – or perhaps it is better to say that Swann found a way to put words in the forefront of Carr’s music. Either way, this nine-movement cycle is as much in the pop-music vein as the classical one: harmonies and words alike tend to be simple-to-simplistic, with the more-effective elements, such as the opening of “The Somnambulist” and parts of “Light Sources,” being entirely without vocal material. The cycle sounds as if it is trying to attain an overall meaning of some sort, but neither its musical arc nor its verbal one is particularly cohesive: the songs, even when they have similar titles (“A Return” followed by “Song of Returns”), are thematically disconnected, and the music never settles into a discernible stylistic pattern. The short Vocalise works better, treating the voice as a fourth instrument in addition to the three in the Benefic Piano Trio; however, the vocalise material itself is not especially involving, and the overall mood of the piece is somewhat disjointed. The vocal works on this disc are joined by Carr’s Piano Trio, which is the most appealing piece on the CD. Although here, as in Nine Bethany Swann Songs, there is no real sense of continuity and connection among the four movements, there are some well-done instrumental contrasts within and among them. “Shanty” is full of instrument-to-instrument gestures, with an underlying sense of drama; “Ritual” contrasts a pleasantly thoughtful opening with a much-more-intense central section; “Hymn” has a simplicity and gentleness that contrasts well with the mood of the preceding movements, if it is perhaps a little too much on the naïve side; and “Dance” is strongly rhythmic, dissonant, and apparently intended as being as different from the preceding movement as possible. Carr’s music on this disc – the third release in an ongoing series – is well-crafted but not highly differentiated from the chamber works (with or without voice) of other modern composers, and is as much on the bland side of contemporary music as the pieces by Balch, Aylward and Praetorius are on the acerbic end of things.
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