Robert
Kyr: All-Night Vigil. Photini Downie
Robinson and Catherine van der Salm, sopranos; Richard Barrett, Mark Powell and
David Stutz, vocals; Sarah Beaty, alto; John Cox and Leslie Green, tenors;
Benjamin España and David Krueger, basses; Cappella Romana conducted by
Alexander Lingas. Cappella Records. $19.99 (SACD).
Heaven
and Earth: A Song of Creation; John Tavener: Ikon of Light. Cappella Romana and 45th Parallel Universe
conducted by John Michael Boyer. Cappella Records. $24.99 (2 SACDs).
William
Baines: Five Songs; Paradise Gardens; The Naïad;
Silverpoints; Tides; The Island of the Fay; Pictures of Light; Eight Preludes; Robin
Walker: At the Grave of Williams Baines.
Gordon Pullin, tenor; Duncan Honeybourne, piano. Divine Art. $18.99.
Richard
Danielpour: Four Angels; James Lee III: Quintet; Ben Shirley: High Sierra
Sonata; Valerie Coleman: Shotgun Houses.
Anthony McGill, clarinet; Pacifica Quartet (Simin Ganatra and Austin Hartman,
violins; Mark Holloway, viola; Brandon Vamos, cello). Cedille. $16.
John
Adams: Hallelujah Junction; Fang Man: Two Colors; John Corigliano:
Kaleidoscope; John Fitz Rogers: Ad Lucem; William Bolcom: The Garden of
Eden—selections. Lomazov-Rackers Piano Duo (Marina Lomazov and
Joseph Rackers). MSR Classics. $14.95.
It has become somewhat easier in recent years for contemporary music to
get an initial performance, with many groups and venues interested in
presenting material not heard before. Getting a second performance remains difficult, however: the willingness to
try something once does not always translate into a willingness to program it
repeatedly. And the chance to get an initial recording of a new work, or for
that matter a rediscovered piece, often remains elusive: recordings can reach
far more people than recitals or concerts, but they require production, sales
and marketing, and distribution, and can represent sizable investments. This
has led to differing schools of thought on bringing new material into recorded
form: in some cases, world première
recordings include only a work never heard in recorded form before, while in
others, the idea is to mix first recordings with offerings of works that have been recorded before and presumably
can draw interested listeners to never-before-recorded material – akin to the
way some concerts and recitals deliberately mix something brand-new with
material with which the audience is likely to be familiar. Two excellently
performed but limited-audience-reach Cappella Romana SACD recordings on the
group’s own label showcase the dual approaches neatly. All-Night Vigil by Robert Kyr (born 1952) is an English-language
work inspired by Rachmaninoff’s 1915 setting of 15 selections from the Orthodox
version of the Resurrection. The Rachmaninoff All-Night Vigil is a tour de
force for choirs and a highly impressive piece of liturgical writing,
although by definition it reaches out only to a limited listenership – both
because of its subject matter and because of its language. Kyr sets English versions
of exactly the same 15 selections chosen by Rachmaninoff, treating everything
respectfully and with deep sincerity – and creating settings that fully explore
the gorgeous sounds of which Cappella Romana is consistently capable. Although
organized religion has been in decline in many nations for decades, and the
Orthodox liturgy is little-known in countries such as the United States, the
warmth, depth and sincerity of the singing in Kyr’s All-Night Vigil transcend the unfamiliarity of the material. The vocal
sound here is simply beautiful: there is a full hour of elegantly phrased,
emotionally penetrating, deeply sincere delivery both of choral material and of
individual lines against a choral background. Some of the work’s most-appealing
elements come in Kyr’s setting of a single voice against a choral background,
as in O Joyful Light, where the
chorus serves as the background against which solo voices stand out with
tremendous clarity – this piece, No. 4 in the total work, sounds like a
painting. Other settings are handled with equal thoughtfulness and skill: Glory to God in the Highest starts in
the low voices before the high ones enter, for example, and My Soul Magnifies the Lord is set with
deliberate verbal expansiveness that reflects the text. Kyr clearly understands
this material and feels it deeply; and while his All-Night Vigil will be fully effective only for listeners versed
in the Orthodox version of the Resurrection, or ones highly familiar with
Rachmaninoff’s handling of the same verses, it cannot be denied that the sheer
sound of this impressive choral work offers an experience of beauty and uplift
from start to finish.
The other new Cappella Romana release is on two SACDs, and combines the
world première recording of Heaven
and Earth: A Song of Creation with a piece that has been made available in
recorded form before, Ikon of Light
by Sir John Tavener (1944-2013). Heaven
and Earth is a collaborative work among Orthodox choral composers Tikey Zes
(born 1927), Alexander Khalil (born 1969), Kurt Sander (born 1969), Matthew
Arendt (born 1976), Richard Toensing (1940-2014), and John Michael Boyer (born
1978) – with Boyer conducting the piece. All the music is derived from the
so-called Creation Psalm, No. 103 (LXX in the Septuagint) – an extended
recitation of all the things done by the Lord “clothed with honor and majesty”
and covered “with light as with a garment.” Although the composers’ treatment
of the textual material differs – there are, for example, notable stylistic
differences between “He Waters the Mountains” (Khalil) and the following “He
Made the Moon” (Sander) – the use of the same underlying text provides a
measure of unity to the piece, and the smooth and assured delivery of Cappella
Romana keeps the work meaningful and communicative throughout. It is not,
however, quite as effective as Tavener’s piece for choir and string trio, in
which the interweaving and contrasting sounds of the voices and the instruments
played by 45th Parallel Universe are consistently involving and
often fascinating. Ikon of Light is
majestic, generally slow-paced, pervaded by a contagious sense of calm that
creates an experience of time expansion, in which the work seems to grow beyond
its 44-minutes duration. There is a near-mystical concept for the string trio,
which is supposed to be placed at a distance from the singers and intended to represent
the soul yearning for the Holy Spirit – which is invoked most strongly in the
fourth and by far longest of the seven movements (taking up almost half the
length of the total piece), “Mystic Prayer to the Holy Spirit.” Tavener’s work
is one of enormous sincerity and meaningfulness for those inclined in the
direction of Orthodox teachings or, really, any organized form of Christianity,
never mind the many doctrinal differences among adherents. The presentation of Ikon of Light is thoroughly impressive,
and if this work’s excellence of creation and performance makes it more likely
that listeners, even a subset of listeners, will become interested in the
never-before-recorded Heaven and Earth,
so much the better for all this music.
The sole vocal entry on a new Divine Art CD featuring music of the
short-lived William Baines (1899-1923: a victim of tuberculosis) is also the
only world première recording on the disc. For Five Songs, Gordon Pullin’s well-modulated tenor voice merges
expressively with Duncan Honeybourne’s piano. Four of these five songs last
less than two minutes, the fifth only two-and-a-half, and these miniatures are
very much of their time: they are Impressionistic, pleasant, with some
well-done tone-painting (especially in the second, Fern Song), but are ultimately not particularly consequential –
although Baines’ determination to keep the words clearly audible while having
the piano paint scenic backgrounds is admirable. The remaining works on the
disc, although not world premières, are somewhat more
substantive, at least in toto – none
of them individually stands out as exceptional music-making except the first
and longest, Paradise Gardens, an
expressive and well-paced10-and-a-half-minute journey to and exploration of a
pleasantly manicured outdoor world. The
Naïad and The Island of the Fay are
single-movement portrayals of their subject matter that use the piano
effectively, showing considerable command of the instrument’s expressive
potential. The other pieces here are multi-movement suites: Silverpoints has four portrayals, Tides two, Pictures of Light three, and each of the Eight Preludes conjures up a different small scene (six of the
eight bear specific titles). Baines is shown here as a miniaturist with
harmonic and expressive orientations similar to those of other composers of the
early 20th century, such as Debussy and Ravel. His ability to evoke
a scene within a few minutes is impressive, and if much of this material is of
the salon-music type, it is not really “light” music but is expressive and
heartfelt, clearly exemplifying its time period if not really exploring new
directions or dimensions. The CD ends with an extended “tribute” piece called At the Grave of William Baines by Robin
Walker (born 1953). At 16 minutes, it is longer than any of the Baines works on
the disc, and this is not to its benefit: Walker’s gestures are largely
expected, his dissonances unexceptional and quite foreign to Baines’ own idiom,
and Walker’s piece lacks any sense of devotion to or comprehension of the type
of music and expressiveness present in Baines’ own piano music as offered here.
The works on a new Cedille recoding featuring clarinetist Anthony McGill
are considerably newer than those by Baines but are mostly specifically
designed, in their own way, to evoke particular scenes – indeed, listeners who
do not know the intended portrayals will not be able fully to appreciate the
works. Only one piece on this disc, Shotgun
Houses by Valerie Coleman, has been recorded before. It is designed as a
tribute to boxer Muhammad Ali and is supposed to interpret his presence in
three specific geographical locations. Familiarity with the subject matter and
Ali’s personal history is necessary for understanding the work, because while
it is played with admirable skill and clarity by McGill and the Pacifica
Quartet, nothing in it is actually reflective of the specific places in its
movement titles. The other three works on the disc are all world première recordings, and all are intended to have
sociopolitical meanings that transcend the music – although they will do so
only for people who take the time to study the works’ background before
listening to them. Richard Danielpour’s Four
Angels is a single-movement reflection on a common contemporary topic, the
church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, 60 years ago, that claimed four young
girls’ lives. It is sensitive and as heartfelt as would be expected, given its
subject matter. James Lee III’s Quintet
contains four movements that are intended to depict specific elements of Native
American life and history. The movements are well-contrasted: the first
angular, the second playful with elements of lyricism, the third emotional and
affecting, the fourth bouncy and celebratory. As a clarinet quintet without
topical insistence attached to it, the piece works quite well; whether it works
better because it is intended to be tied to Native American issues is a matter
of opinion. Indeed, that value-of-a-specific-tie-in question is one for this
entire disc, which bears the overall title “American Stories.” High Sierra Sonata, a three-movement
work by Ben Shirley, is intended to reflect experiences the composer had in the
Eastern Sierras, and certainly portions of it, especially the second movement,
sound as if they somehow respond to personal matters. But this work does not
need the gloss of specificity to have its effect: like Lee’s (although to a
lesser extent), Shirley’s hangs together well simply as music, without
requiring an audience to research its reasons for being or the rationale for
its movement titles. The Danielpour and Coleman works do demand that of listeners, and that actually diminishes those
pieces, since they are too insistent on their “meaningfulness” instead of relying
on an audience to experience (and perhaps judge) them on how well they communicate
the composers’ thoughts and emotions to people the creators of the music do not
know and will never meet. It is easier to see Lee’s and Shirley’s pieces
getting additional hearings and recordings simply as music than it is to see
Danielpour’s and Coleman’s works being regarded as anything but self-limiting “cause”
music, no matter how well-played.
Two of the five works on a new MSR Classics CD featuring the Lomazov-Rackers Piano Duo are world première recordings, while the other three are by much-better-known contemporary composers – an effective way to package previously unheard material with works with which listeners who enjoy modern piano pieces may already be familiar. The premières are the two-movement Two Colors (2001/1996) by Fang Man (born 1977) and single-movement Ad Lucem (2007) by John Fitz Rogers (born 1963). Man’s colors are “Pure White” (delicate and flowing, almost like water) and “Big Red” (angular, staccato, dissonant, pointed). This is contemporary Impressionism on display, and well-made even if not very clearly connected to the specific colors indicated. Ad Lucem is a more-extended work (twice the length of Man’s two movements put together) that focuses on creating a dialogue between the pianos. In truth, although both these pieces are well-crafted, neither impresses as much as those by the more-established composers. Hallelujah Junction (1996) by John Adams (born 1947), the longest piece on the CD (nearly 17 minutes), will be somewhat too repetitive for those not enamored of Adams’ typical style, but it certainly showcases that style effectively for those who find it enjoyable. Kaleidoscope (1959) by John Corigliano (born 1938) packs a great deal of piano interplay and rhythmic verve into its comparatively compact six-minute time frame, and bears rehearing just to pick up some of the skillful and interesting ways in which Corigliano tosses material between the performers. Also worth hearing repeatedly – and in fact at greater length than offered here – is The Garden of Eden (2006) by William Bolcom (born 1938). A meticulous craftsman with a special fondness for religious/spiritual themes, Bolcom is heard here in excerpts called “The Eternal Feminine” and “The Serpent’s Kiss.” There is an apparent ease of both composition and performance in these strongly jazz-influenced selections, the first pleasantly lilting and the second suitably dramatic to the point of sounding like an accompaniment to the “villain” segment of a silent movie. Bolcom has a carefully honed sense of piano style and of the dramatic, and he brings both to bear very effectively here – and Marina Lomazov and Joseph Rackers, who play all the works on the CD with aplomb, sound as if they are thoroughly enjoying offering these specific pieces to an audience. It is a bit puzzling, however, that they present only two of the four works from The Garden of Eden, since the entire disc is short – just 50 minutes – and there was plenty of room for the other two. In any case, the Adams, Corigliano and Bolcom works surround those by Man and Rogers, and if the sandwiching puts the Man and Rogers pieces at something of a disadvantage because of the inevitable comparison with the other works, it also provides an interesting way to hear the world première recordings in the context of modern two-piano music that has become better-established with listeners.
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