Christoph
Croisé: Cello Concerto No. 1; Voyage Exotique; Clarinet Trio; Cello Sonata No.
1. Christoph Croisé, cello;
Kammerorchester der Niederlenzer Musiktage; Annette Jakovčić, cello; Damien
Bachmann, clarinet; Oxana Shevchenko, piano. AVIE. $17.99.
Music
from the Iranian Female Composers Association. Brian Thornton, cello; Katherine Bormann and Alicia
Koelz, violins; Eliesha Nelson, viola; Callisto Quartet (Paul Aguilar and
Rachel Aguilar, violins; Eva Kennedy, viola; Hannah Moses, cello); Amahl
Arulanandam, cello; Nathan Petitpas, percussion. New Focus Recordings. $16.99.
Lee
Weisert: Recesses; Similar Speeds.
Lee Weisert, piano, guitar, percussion, and electronics. New Focus Recordings.
$16.99.
Many contemporary musical creators are as eager to showcase themselves
in performance roles as in their compositions. There is, of course, a very
longstanding tradition of this: a great many classical works in the past 400
years, and even earlier, were written by composers who also performed them or
were part of their performances, and famous music of many types was created by
and for composer-performers through the 19th century (think of Liszt
or the Strauss family) and into the 20th (Rachmaninoff, for one). In
more-recent times, listeners have largely become accustomed to performers
presenting music by composers other than themselves – but the
composer-performer tradition continues in some quarters, if in somewhat
different ways from those of the past. Thus, cellist-composer Christoph Croisé (born
1993) offers four of his own works, all written between 2020 and 2022, on a new
AVIE disc. The four-movement Cello
Concerto No. 1 sets up a main theme that carries through the whole piece;
frequently places the violin antagonistically against the cello; and reaches
into non-classical acoustic realms through the prominent inclusion of a drum
set. The second movement is intensely soloist-focused, with Croisé playing
almost continuously and engaging in a very extended cadenza. The third movement
nearly eschews classical structure altogether, its sound world that of the
electronic dance music of techno clubs. The finale is speedy, dramatic,
rhythmic in multiple ways, and intense at times while being nearly lyrical at
others – it is something of a stylistic mash-up, and is the most effective
portion of the concerto. The Clarinet
Trio follows a somewhat analogous path in its three movements. The first
movement features themes that flicker in and out, quickly replaced by others,
without any particular development. The second focuses as much on the cello –
which opens the movement with an extended solo – as on the clarinet, which does
not exactly play second fiddle (so to speak) but which functions as the cello’s
partner. The finale’s bossa nova beat
is appealing and, as in much of the music on this disc, functions as a
cross-genre element underpinning the material. Cello Sonata No. 1, like the concerto, is in four movements; also
as in the concerto, the first movement sets out the thematic material that will
be explored throughout. Croisé effectively contrasts strongly accented and
rather ominous sounds with milder, quieter material that never quite counters
the darkness. The second movement is gentle and surprisingly sweet: here Croisé
takes advantage of the warmth and beauty of the cello’s sound in a way that he
does nowhere else in any of the works on this CD. The third movement’s sounds
are a strong contrast, strong and anguished and at times verging on the
unpleasant. The finale is closer in mood to the third movement than the second,
dissonant and unevenly rhythmic – like other finales on this disc, it has dance
elements, but the ones here are of the danse
macabre variety, even if not truly spooky. In some ways the most interesting
piece on this disc is the most cello-focused of all: Voyage Exotique is a two-cello “Grand Duo” whose four movements
carry listeners to distinctly different auditory realms and interweave the
cellos so effectively that the piece seems to call on more sonorities than can
be contained in a mere two instruments. The movements have interesting titles
that, far from being arbitrary, provide listeners with some clues as to what is
going on. Blu Rhino Track is by turns
rhapsodically nocturne-like and strongly rhythmic. A Train to Ugudu Yelu journeys to an imaginary place on imaginary
tracks in what sounds a lot like wave motion. Tarantula Spiritualis is more about the spider than the tarantella
dance inspired by its bite: the web-spinning has both cellos producing
electronic-sounding elements. The finale, Black
Mamba Island, moves from spiders to snakes and actually has some of the
rhythmic feeling of a tarantella – but, in the main, has the two cellos
imitating the sounds and movements of venomous serpents. Croisé and his
colleagues play all four works on the disc with enthusiasm, and the music
itself – a generous helping of it, 80 minutes in all – has many points of
interest through its intermingling of forms and its unashamed self-display as a
stylistic mélange.
The cello also plays a major role, both as a solo instrument and with
others, on a New Focus Recordings CD offering six works by Iranian female
composers, assembled and primarily performed by Cleveland Orchestra cellist
Brian Thornton. Mahdis Golzar Kashani’s And
the Moses Drowned is an extended single movement for string quartet,
intended as a “cause” piece responding to the Syrian war but interesting to
hear without needing to know its provenance. It includes two Largo sections alternating with two Vivace ones, the slower material’s
mournful drama contrasting with the faster elements’ strong rhythmic drive.
Nina Barzegar’s Vulnerable is for
solo cello and is built on contrasts of technique and speed; it is somewhat too
stretched-out to be fully effective, but its more-animated latter portions are
well-thought-through. Nasim Khorassani’s Growth,
for string trio, is textural rather than melodic or harmonic, and uses the
interplay of instrumental sounds effectively. Niloufar Iravani’s three-movement
The Maze for string quartet (played
here by the Callisto Quartet) uses different modes and meters in each movement
and comes across as a kind of journey through compositional techniques – in
which the finale, Mysterious, is
particularly intriguing in its channeling of Ives’ The Unanswered Question. Anahita Abbasi’s Sirventès for cello (Amahl Arulanandam) and percussion (Nathan
Petitpas) is a study in sound, using the cello in a percussion context and the
percussion to provide structure rather than merely emphasis. It is an
interesting aural experiment whose appeal is more intellectual than visceral.
Thornton’s cello, absent from the Iravani and Abbasi works, returns for the
last piece on the disc, Mina Arissian’s three-movement Suite for Cello. This solo piece lies more naturally on the cello
than anything else on the CD, and most fully allows the instrument to express
its ingrained melodiousness and richness. A technical tour de force, the work does not sound as if it is trying to transform
the cello into something beyond its inherent nature: it allows expressiveness
to flow smoothly through multiple emotional peaks and valleys, with Thornton’s
elegant phrasing and careful evocation of mood helping the material connect
more directly with listeners than will likely be the case for the other pieces
heard here.
Unlike cellist Croisé, cellist Thornton did not compose the works he interprets – but Lee Weisert (born 1978) did compose the pieces he and colleagues present on another New Focus Recordings release. His instrument, however, is not the cello: Weisert holds forth on piano, guitar, percussion, and electronics, along with participants Allen Anderson (modular synthesis), Nicholas DiEugenio (violin), Jonathon Kirk (electronics), Melissa Martin (vocals), and Matthew McClure (saxophone). These instruments invite listeners to a very eclectic collection of sounds indeed, and that is just what Weisert provides in Recesses and Similar Speeds. Nearly the entire CD is devoted to Recesses, which is subdivided as Recesses I and Recesses II, the first of them being further broken into two portions. To anyone not thoroughly versed in, familiar with and enthusiastic about electronic music, all the material is going to sound very much alike. The first part of Recesses I has the usual background-ish electronic sounds with some foreground material such as children’s voices and occasional snippets of orchestral strings. The second part also mixes electronically generated tones (more individualized in this section) with vocal bits and pieces and occasional far-in-the-background consonances over which the foreground electronic waves wash incessantly. Recesses II starts as if it is growling, then turns into a series of unsurprising clicks, grunts, taps and individual piano notes, all within the usual outer-space-sounding envelope of so much electronic music. In all, the Recesses elements take up 45 of the 51 minutes on the disc, which turns Similar Speeds into a kind of six-minute encore presented purely by Weisert. The work sounds like a procession of electronically generated and/or enhanced gamelan or other metallophone material, with frequent rhythmic changes that provide more-interesting variability than anything in Recesses – and the added plus that Similar Speeds is so much shorter that it spends much less time dwelling on its sonic profile. All this music is for a very narrow, strongly committed audience that is determinedly avant-garde and wedded to the notion of the power of electronics to produce engaging audio material. Those self-regarding cognoscenti will find much in this material to intrigue them. But anyone who is not already a member of the “in” group is highly unlikely to be drawn into it by experiencing anything on offer here.
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