Richard
Strauss: Sonatinas Nos. 1 and 2 for 16 Wind Instruments; Serenade for 13 Wind
Instruments, Op. 7; Suite for 13 Wind Instruments, Op. 4; Till Eulenspiegel’s
Merry Pranks—arrangement for wind instruments and percussion. Members of Staatskapelle Berlin conducted by Gregor
Witt. Capriccio. $20.99 (2 CDs).
Missy
Mazzoli: Tooth and Nail; Jen Shyu: Jeom Jaeng Yi (Fortune Teller); Angélica
Negrón: Panorama; Miya Masaoka: Mapping a Joyful Path; Samantha Fernando:
Balconies. Olivia De Prato, violin.
New Focus Recordings. $16.99.
Most listeners who associate a specific instrumental group with the
music of Richard Strauss would likely select the brass, since his use of brass
instruments is so all-pervasive and effective both in instrumental music and in
opera. Strauss’ music for winds is a much smaller part of his oeuvre than are his brass works: his
entire output for wind ensemble amounts to only some two hours of music. All of
it is now available on an exceptionally well-played two-CD Capriccio set
featuring members of Staatskapelle Berlin conducted by Gregor Witt, Staatskapelle
Berlin’s longtime principal oboist. This recording is an interesting
exploration for listeners looking for insight into some less-explored nooks and
crannies of Strauss’ output, although it would be stretching things to suggest
that any major new revelations about the composer’s sound world are to be found
here. Strauss at his least inviting can be dense, even turgid, and the two
latest and most-substantial works offered here suffer from a kind of
overpowering massing of sound in instruments that are at their best when
handled with much greater delicacy and individuality than Strauss proffers.
Both these “sonatinas” (a misnomer in light of their extensive nature) date to
the last decade of Strauss’ life. Sonatina No. 1 was written in 1943 and titled
Aus der Werkstatt eines Invaliden
(“From an Invalid’s Workshop”), while No. 2 dates to 1944-45 and has the title Fröhliche Werkstatt (“The Happy
Workshop”). Titles aide, there is nothing in either work particularly
reflective of dismay or joy. Sonatina No. 1 is in three movements, Sonatina No.
2 in four, and both focus primarily on massed winds and a certain attempt to
attain grandeur in the outer movements – an effort that lingers a bit too close
to pomposity. Listeners will find little here in which the instruments attain
the lightness of which they are capable – probably the second movement of
Sonatina No. 2, marked Andantino, sehr
gemächlich, comes closest – but will find more instances of a kind of bloat
that is very definitely in line with Romantic-era expressiveness. There is more
to enjoy in the much earlier music on this release: Serenade for 13 Wind Instruments of 1881 and Suite for 13 Wind Instruments of 1884. If the later 16-wind works
are heavily Romantic, the earlier 13-wind ones have a lighter touch and
more-balanced feeling that are akin to pieces from the Classical era – at least
as close to it as Strauss ever came. The Serenade
is in a single eight-minute movement, the Suite
in four movements lasting some 26 minutes, but both fit their respective
durations well and sustain interest not only through expressiveness but also
because of Strauss’ well-balanced handling of the ensemble. For what it may be
worth, though, the most-enjoyable piece on hand here is Matthias Pflaum’s
arrangement for winds and percussion of Till
Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks (1894-95). This hyper-familiar, unceasingly
good-humored work fits surprisingly well into a wind arrangement. Or perhaps
not so surprisingly, since the orchestral version has so many instances in
which winds carry the story: the bassoon representing pretentious academics,
the flutes as Till reaches the top of the gallows, and the justly famous
clarinet wail of the execution. From these, it is not so long a step to having
the winds (and percussion) tell the entire tale, which they do with relish. Strauss’
later and more-substantial wind-ensemble works are certainly worth hearing for
anyone strongly interested in the composer; his earlier ones definitely show
some Classical leanings that are otherwise rarely apparent in his music; but it
is the arrangement of the tale of Till Eulenspiegel that provides the greatest
musical pleasure in this interesting if somewhat narrowly focused release.
The focus is even narrower – and of course newer – on a New Focus Recordings CD featuring violinist Olivia De Prato in combination with electronics and/or herself. The five pieces here give De Prato opportunities to show her skill in a wide variety of avant-garde works. Missy Mazzoli’s Tooth and Nail is inspired by the Jew’s harp (now usually called the jaw harp), combining violin with electronics (performed by Mazzoli) in a piece that starts with an insistent ostinato that recurs throughout as the music wanders from effects-driven material (notably glissandi) to near-lyricism. Jen Shyu’s Jeom Jaeng Yi (Fortune Teller) is for “speaking violinist” and is one of those works whose genesis an audience needs to know in order to appreciate the music: it is inspired by the writing of performance artist Theresa Hak Kyung Cha and is rhythmically reflective of speech patterns – but is musically rather vapid. Angélica Negrón’s Panorama, with the composer on electronics, is essentially a series of background sounds that become foreground material simply by virtue of nothing else being available – although its central section has more rhythmic energy. Miya Masaoka’s Mapping a Joyful Path, yet another piece with its composer on electronics, starts with an electronic sine wave that functions as a non-acoustic ostinato, then meanders into a typically contemporary set of extended rather than inherent violin techniques, with sound production whose microtonal focus keeps the instrument itself sounding as if it on the verge of becoming electronic. Finally, Samantha Fernando’s Balconies is for multiple violins, all five of them played by De Prato thanks to four recorded parts. The piece starts with a chordal background-ish sound from which individual lines seek, largely unsuccessfully, to emerge, and progresses through a series of auditory landscapes that never really resolve but are their own reasons for being. Like so much contemporary music, the five works here are explorations of sounds and of extended performance techniques – interesting for audiences already enamored of similar material, but unlikely to draw in new listeners who are accustomed to music with a stronger emphasis on thematic development, rhythmic variety and perhaps even emotional connections.
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