Bach:
Sarabandes from Cello Suites Nos. 1, 2 and 4; Gaspar Cassadó: Suite for Cello
Solo; Elisenda Fábregas: Danses de la terra (Catalan Dances); Marin Marais: Les
Voix Humaines; Marc Migó: Variacions sobre el nom de Casals; Traditional
Catalan Song: El cant dels ocells.
Roger Morelló Ros, cello. IBS Classical. $16.
Gerald
Cohen: Voyagers; Playing for our lives; Preludes and Debka. Cassatt String Quartet (Muneko Otani and Jennifer
Leshnower, violins; Ah Ling Neu, viola; Elizabeth Anderson, cello); Narek
Arutyunian, clarinet and bass clarinet; Colin Williams, trombone. Innova. $15.
Daron
Hagen: Dante Fragments; Brian Holmes: There Was an Old Man; Hilary Tann:
…Against the Shore; Stacy Garrop: The Solitude of Stars; Michael Scherperel:
Merciles Beautè; Edgar Girtain: Three Appalachian Folk Songs. October Sky Ensemble (Brian Thorsett, tenor; John
Irrera, violin; Alan Weinstein, cello; Annie Stevens, percussion). MSR
Classics. $14.95.
An interestingly conceptualized tribute to the great cellist Pau (Pablo)
Casals (1876-1973), a recent IBS Classics release featuring Roger Morelló Ros
(born 1993) offers excellent playing by a cellist who, like Casals, was born in
Catalonia. The actual musical presence of Casals on the disc is, however,
confined to the arrangement of a traditional Catalan song and Variacions sobre el nom de Casals by
Marc Migó (born 1993). The arrangement of the song, whose title translates as The Song of the Birds, is actually by
both Casals and Morelló Ros, and it is warm and heartfelt and thoroughly
cognizant of the cello’s communicative power. The Migó work, which is in two
contrasting movements, focuses as much on techniques such as pizzicato and
spiccato as on the musical line, and determinedly uses the higher register of the
cello to make some of its points. The connective tissue of this recital,
though, is the music of Bach, whose solo sarabandes from three of his cello
suites serve as punctuation points for the rest of the music: they are the
second, fifth and eighth-and-last offerings on the CD. All are played with
warmth and an attractively understated sense of emotive elegance that, however,
is somewhat at odds with the forms of expression of some of the other music on
the disc. The CD opens with the three-movement Suite for Solo Cello by Gaspar Cassadó (1897-1966); the work’s
opening Fantasia and bright
concluding Danza are particularly
attractive. Speaking of dances, Danses de
la terra (Catalan Dances) by Elisenda Fábregas (born 1955) are strongly
rhythmic and nicely accentuated by Morelló Ros. The bouncy-but-expressive Dansa de rondalla amorosa is
particularly attractive. These dances are followed, rather oddly, by Morelló
Ros’ arrangement of Les Voix Humaines
by Marin Marais (1656-1728), a work originally written for viola da gamba. The
gentle beauty and understated elegance of Marais’ work are highly attractive,
even if the piece does not quite fit with the more-modern cello works heard
here. The playing on the CD is exemplary throughout, but it is really necessary
to know about the works’ connections to each other and to Casals to get the
disc’s full effect: for instance, Migó’s work is based on the prelude (not the
sarabande) from Bach’s first cello suite, and Cassadó was a Casals pupil. Cellists
and aficionados of Casals will find considerably more of interest here than
will more-casual listeners.
The music of Gerald Cohen (born 1960) on a recent Innova release uses
the cello, and other strings, both on their own in quartet form and in
combination with additional instruments. Cohen uses the wider tonal palette
thus made available for three works of widely varying purpose. Voyagers is a four-movement piece for
string quartet with clarinet and bass clarinet, inspired by the audio included
on the so-called Golden Record carried by the two Voyager spacecraft that were
launched in 1977. The audio on that record is quite varied and so, as a result,
is Cohen’s work. The first movement, based on Beethoven’s String Quartet No.
13, combines Ivesian “vastness” elements with more-energetic material. The
second movement is generally quiet and thoughtful; the third is bouncy and
rhythmic (it is based on a Renaissance dance); and the fourth is a kind of
recollection of the first three, with the emphasis on the first and its
evocation of the vast expanse of space. Strings alone are the vehicle for Playing for our lives, which was written
for the Cassatt String Quartet and designed as a memorial to composers who were
interned in the Theresienstadt concentration camp during World War II. Pervaded
by themes used by composers kept in the camp or by music associated with those
composers or their circumstances, the three-movement piece opens,
unsurprisingly, with intensely dissonant chords, then moves through a wide
range of themes, pacing and emotion, with the second movement, Brundibar, being especially warm and
expressive in a manner reminiscent of Dvořák (the movement’s title refers to an
opera performed by children that was very popular in Theresienstadt). The
finale, again unsurprisingly, is called Dies
Irae. It includes excerpts from Verdi’s Requiem
and is intended as a defiant message aimed at the Nazis – but that is a “meta”
commentary on the concentration camp rather than anything actually expressed
there. The quartet is certainly well-meant and heartfelt, and the performers’
intensity is welcome here as it is throughout the disc. But the music consists
mostly of expected gestures and commentary on a gigantic atrocity that has been
explored many, many times before. It is worthy material but does not really
have anything to say that has not already been said. Preludes and Debka, like Voyagers,
expands the string complement, this time with a trombone. It is an intriguing
single-movement, four-section work focusing on the debka, a Middle Eastern
dance. From its mysterious opening to its final variations on the debka tune, the
work is engaging – lighter than either of the other pieces on the CD, but all
the more effective because it is less fraught with attempts to convey specific
meanings through the music. All three pieces on the disc are carefully
structured and well-thought-out, and all contain memorable elements. But only Preludes and Debka, the
least-self-important of them, sustains well from start to finish.
The trombone-and-strings combination is an unusual one, but the mixture on an MSR Classics release is even more so: this CD consists entirely of world première recordings of pieces for tenor, violin, cello and percussion. The sound world created by the instruments – the voice is best thought of here, in most cases, as an instrumental component – is intriguing, although the six works performed by the October Sky Ensemble are very much a mixed bag. Dante Fragments by Daron Hagen (born 1961) consists of three quietly melancholic songs, the third of which uses percussion to especially good effect. In strong contrast, There Was an Old Man by Brian Holmes (born 1946) includes no fewer than eight Edward Lear limericks in a total time of less than eight minutes. The musical structure here is voice-plus-violin; the words are more crucial than in some other works on the CD; and the humor of the verbiage is well-complemented instrumentally throughout. The plucking associated with “There was a Young Lady whose chin” is especially apt and especially funny (this young lady has her chin sharpened so she can use it to play the harp); and the falsetto opening of the particularly silly “There was an Old Person of Wick” is a highlight. The next work on the disc, …Against the Shore (the ellipsis is part of the title) by Hilary Tann (1947-2023), is much more extended (11½ minutes) and considerably more serious, indeed somewhat overly serious, in its setting of words by Gerard Manley Hopkins. The Solitude of Stars by Stacy Garrop (born 1949) has some of the same otherworldly feeling as Gerald Cohen’s Voyagers, with percussive expressiveness the dominant effect here. Much more down-to-earth are the three settings of Chaucer in Merciles Beautè by Michael Scherperel (born 1947). The Middle English words, delivered in less-than-straightforward fashion, will be difficult for most listeners to fathom, but there are several well-done musical effects here, such as the unusual rhythmic use of the cello in the second and third songs. The disc concludes with Three Appalachian Folk Songs by Edgar Girtain (born 1988) – a work whose plainspoken modern words provide a strong contrast to those of Chaucer. Girtain sandwiches a very extended setting of Barbara Allen (a full 10 minutes long) between two much shorter songs (each under three minutes) – a structure that comes across as somewhat unbalanced, although it gives the instruments more opportunities for scene-setting and underlining the words in the longest song. Art songs in general, never mind ones for unusual instrumental groupings, are something of an acquired taste, and while the notable contrasts of mood on this disc keep it from becoming tedious, it turns out that Brian Holmes’ light and silly settings provide the most consistently engaging experience.
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