01_SchubertSchubert - Piano Sonatas
Boris Zarankin
Doremi DHR-71153

If the listener didn’t know it before, this CD confirms that Boris Zarankin possesses an ardent empathy with Schubert. From the opening bars of the first movement of the great Sonata in B-Flat Major, marked molto moderato, there is almost a quasi religious awakening and as the music unfolds, further dimensions are revealed that one does not hear in other versions of this familiar work. Well, not quite. Hearing Zarankin conjured up the performance by Valery Afanassiev recorded live at the Lockenhaus Festival in 1986 that has lingered in my memory as an interpretation with the same intense, poetic introversion. However, listening to that performance once again, as attractive as it is, Zarankin is the more poetic, realizing the tragedy of Schubert playing out the last chapter of his life.

In both sonatas Boris Zarankin is in a class of his own, fully justifying his venturing into such frequently charted repertoire. Zarankin has his own ideas about playing these sonatas but I sense that they are also Schubert’s.

These recordings were made last August in Glenn Gould Studio in Toronto and engineered by Clive Allen who is responsible for the eminently truthful and dynamic, wide-range sound.


03a_Bruckner_4_Haitink03b_Bruckner_4_NezetBruckner - Symphony No.4
London Symphony Orchestra; Bernard Haitink
LSO Live LSO0716

Bruckner - Symphony No.4
Orchestre Métropolitain du Grand Montréal; Yannick Nézet-Séguin
ATMA ACD2 2667

This is Bernard Haitink’s third commercial recording of Bruckner’s popular Symphony No.4, in this instance using the Nowak edition of the score and culled from a pair of live performances from June 2011. The London Symphony Orchestra is unquestionably an outstanding ensemble with an exceptionally impressive string section, seated here in the European style with the violins divided right and left and the double basses to the left rear. The orchestra responds adroitly to the stolid octogenarian Haitink, a celebrated master of elucidating the ofttimes shambolic structure of Bruckner’s symphonies. Ultimately, however, all this excellence is undermined by the problematic acoustics of London’s Barbican Centre. The resplendent string tone is noticeably recessed and the sound-stage, though wide, lacks depth. Some tremendous brass playing, particularly from the closely-miked horn section, offers considerable recompense however.

No such problems mar the lively sound of Nézet-Séguin’s conventionally seated Métropolitain string ensemble, though they are a comparatively lean and slightly underpowered force compared to the LSO ensemble, with two fewer players in each section. The response from the judiciously balanced full orchestra is consistently precise, electric and blessed with a contagious enthusiasm and attention to dynamic shading that renders even the most meandering passages of Bruckner’s rambling discourse riveting. The performance utilizes the 1936 Haas edition in splendid studio sound recorded at Québec’s Église Saint-Ferdinand. Some may consider Nézet-Séguin’s overtly theatrical approach rather over-the-top in the Scherzo movement, where he drives his forces into a Berliozian frenzy, but for my money this is one of those rare Bruckner performances that commands my complete attention. The clear winner? The home team!

01_Lara_St._JohnThe Canadian violinist Lara St. John, by her own admission, never managed to really connect with the Bach Sonatas for Violin and Harpsichord; somehow, she says, she “never thought they quite clicked,” either with harpsichord or modern piano accompaniment. Several years ago, when St. John was staying in Berlin with Marie-Pierre Langlamet, the principal harpist of the Berlin Philharmonic since 1993, the two read through some Bach sonatas. It was, says St. John, “a revelation.” Bach Sonatas, her new CD with Langlamet on her own Ancalagon label (ANC 139) is the result, and it is, indeed, a revelation. The switch from harpsichord to harp is obviously the major factor here. There might be very little dynamic range on the keyboard instrument, but it’s scarcely any bigger on the harp. Moreover, the crisp, precise incision of the note attack on the harpsichord is replaced by a softer, gentler and more luminous sound on the harp, especially in the bass lines of the lower register. This completely changes the nature of the accompaniment, and poses significant questions for the violinist: straightforward, by-the-numbers playing, especially in the faster contrapuntal passages, simply won’t work anymore. St. John, however, has the perfect answer, playing not only with unerring accuracy but also with a wonderfully expressive sensitivity, almost as if thoughtfully probing and exploring the music rather than simply presenting it. It’s intelligent and nuance-filled music-making of the highest level, and matched for both nuance and sensitivity by Langlamet.

This is by no means a complete set of the six sonatas. The performers chose sonatas where the keyboard part could be played as written (and the harpsichord parts for these works were fully written out, and not just a figured bass part) with no need for transcription for the harp. Two violin sonatas – No.1 in B Minor BWV1014 and No.3 in E Major BWV1016 – are here, together with the Flute Sonatas in G Minor BWV1020 (possibly not written by Bach) and in B Minor BWV1030, and the Siciliana from the Flute Sonata in E-Flat Major BWV1031.

Beautifully recorded in Berlin, the result is a supremely satisfying CD that presents these works in a quite different light.

Concert Note: The Lindsay Concert Foundation’s Kawartha Concerts Series presents Lara St. John and Marie-Pierre Langlamet in music of Bach, Saint-Saëns, Debussy and Fauré at Glenn Crombie Theatre, Fleming College in Lindsay on March 4.

02_Russian_QuartetsThe two-CD set The Soviet Experience Volume 1 is the first in a series on Chicago’s excellent Cedille label devoted to String Quartets of Dmitri Shostakovich and his Contemporaries (Cedille CDR 90000 127). I can think of few quartets that are as immediately recognizable as those of Shostakovich, and of no music that is more imbued with personal pain and a sense of utter resignation, together with a heart-breaking sense of nostalgia for better days, now long gone. Listening to his music often seems like eavesdropping on a private and intimate conversation. The Pacifica Quartet performed the complete Shostakovich cycle in five Chicago concerts over a four-month period in 2010/11 as part of The Soviet Arts Experience, a 16-month-long project showcasing artists who worked in the old Soviet Union, and they have obviously developed a deep understanding of these works. The four quartets Nos. 5 to 8 are included on this first volume and the Pacifica members are terrific throughout, scaling the heights of the music as convincingly as they plumb the depths. The overwhelmingly autobiographical – and achingly personal – Quartet No.8 Op.110 is particularly effective.

Nikolai Miaskovsky was 25 years older than Shostakovich, but was also included in the notorious 1948 Zhdanov decree that accused many of the Soviet Union’s leading composers of “formalism.” He was 36 when the 1917 Revolution took place, and, as the excellent booklet notes by William Hussey point out, was the only major Soviet composer who was also a member of the pre-Revolution generation of Tchaikovsky and Rimsky-Korsakov. His String Quartet No.13 in A Minor was written in 1950, not long before his death, and – not surprisingly, given the circumstances – in a fairly conservative style. If it has nowhere near the personal depth of the Shostakovich quartets, it’s still a fine work and receives an equally fine performance here.

Presumably, the complete cycle will be made available on CD before too long. If this first volume is anything to go by, it will be a significant addition to the Shostakovich catalogue.

03_Joshua_BellFrench Impressions is the title of the latest CD from Joshua Bell and Jeremy Denk (Sony Classical 88697 82026 2). At first sight, it seems slightly misleading, as the Ravel sonata is the only Impressionist work on the disc; the other two works are the Violin Sonata No.1 of Camille Saint-Saëns and the Sonata in A Major of César Franck. On first hearing, however, the title makes more sense. These are all works that invite flashy virtuosity, but although the virtuosity is clearly present the “flash” is absent; instead, the technical assurance is combined with an expressiveness and a musical maturity that presents all three works in a thoughtful, illuminating manner. The clue to this approach lies in the informal but very informative booklet notes, where Jeremy Denk considers what makes French music French: “sounds that float, hover, harmony like a scent, a perfume evaporating into air.” Add his comments about light and color, and it becomes clear that the performers are concerned more with impressions here than with virtuosity. The Saint-Saëns sonata is the one with the dazzling finale full of cascading octave runs, and while Bell might not be quite as hair-raising as James Ehnes in this movement, it’s perfectly balanced with the rest of the sonata. The Franck, so familiar as to easily risk becoming stale in the wrong hands, is beautifully judged, with some particularly outstanding piano playing from Denk, and the Ravel is a delight from start to finish. Bell plays brilliantly and intelligently, with a great tone and lovely phrasing, but never a hint of virtuosity for its own sake; Denk is simply stunning at the piano. The balance and recorded sound are excellent.

04_DiotimaThere is a startling mixture of compositional styles on American Music, the new CD from the French ensemble Quatuor Diotima that features string quartets by Steve Reich, Samuel Barber and George Crumb (naïve V 5272). Reich’s Different Trains for string quartet and tape, from 1988, was inspired by the childhood railway journeys he made with his governess between 1939 and 1942. Struck by how different the circumstances and experience would have been for a Jew riding on trains in Europe at that time, he conceived a work that combined a pre-recording of the quartet with train sounds from the period and with snippets of the recorded voices of his old governess and survivors of the Holocaust.

The three movements are “America – Before the War,” “Europe – During the War,” and “After the War,” but while Reich’s minimalist-driven style successfully creates a sense of mechanical perpetual motion, and while the instrumental doubling of the vocal scraps is very effective, I couldn’t help feeling that the middle movement failed to create an emotional centre for the work. For a middle movement that not only serves as the focal point of the work but also assumes a life of its own, you need look no further than Barber’s String Quartet in B Minor Op.11; the Molto adagio second movement became one of the most popular and widely-performed pieces of all time when the composer transcribed it as his Adagio for Strings. It’s certainly interesting to hear it in its original form and context, especially when the performance is as sensitive and as understated as it is here. It’s impossible to imagine any work farther away from the Barber than Crumb’s Black Angels for electric quartet, and what a startlingly original and stunning soundscape it is! Written in 1970 and subtitled 13 Images from the Dark Land, it requires the performers to use extended playing techniques as well as to play other instruments (glass rods, crystal glasses, maracas, tam-tams) and occasionally to use their own voices. The thirteen short sections are divided into three movements: I. Departure; II. Absence; and III. Return. The booklet notes call it “a deathly ceremonial, a sort of black mass,” and there are constant musical references to Death, Hell (the Dark Land) and the Devil throughout the work. The quartet’s construction is apparently governed by numerology – in particular the numbers 7 and 13 – but Crumb has increasingly played down their significance since 1970. It’s a simply astonishing work, complex and difficult enough to make any objective review of the performance – in comparison, say, to the Kronos Quartet’s performance – almost impossible, and certainly irrelevant. Suffice it to say that it’s a stunning aural and musical experience.

Schumann_Doric_QuartetRobert Schumann, more than any other composer, chose to concentrate on one particular form of composition at a time. 1842 was devoted to chamber music, and his three String Quartets, Op. 41 were written in a matter of eight weeks in the middle of the year, after he had spent several months studying the quartets of Haydn, Mozart and – in particular – Beethoven. The influence of the latter is easy to hear, but the voice that really leaps out at you on a new CD from the Doric String Quartet (Chandos CHAN 10692) is that of Mendelssohn, to whom the quartets were dedicated on their publication in 1848. These are top-notch performances in all respects, but the Doric Quartet is particularly outstanding in the Mendelssohn-like scherzo movements, where their articulation, ensemble playing and dynamics in the scurrying passages are simply superb. There’s some rather obtrusive breathing in the slower movements, but not enough to detract from a terrific CD.

06_Meyer_QuartetsNaxos has added another excellent CD to its already outstanding catalogue of contemporary string quartets with the Wieniawski Quartet’s performances of the String Quartets Nos. 9, 11 and 12 by Polish composer Krzysztof Meyer (Naxos 8.572656). Meyer, born in 1943, was a student of Penderecki and is a recognized authority on the life and works of Shostakovich. There is more than a hint of the Soviet composer in Meyer’s quartets, but there is also no doubting that there is a highly competent and individual craftsman at work here. Meyer’s ongoing series of string quartets currently stands at 12 works and covers 42 years, from 1963 to 2005. Quartet No.9 dates from 1990 and No.11 from 2001. All three works on this CD are quite different in form: No.9 is in five movements; No.11 is a single-movement work; No.12 is nine mostly short movements joined together in a manner similar to Beethoven’s Quartet in C-Sharp Minor Op.131. Meyer employs a range of compositional techniques, but you’re never aware of them; these quartets are always accessible, engrossing and highly effective. It would be difficult to imagine more suitable interpreters of these works than the all-Polish Wieniawski Quartet, who have been together for 15 years. Their playing is exemplary in all respects. They have already recorded Quartets Nos. 5, 6 and 8 for Naxos (8.570776). “Intensely dramatic and eloquent,” says the jewel case blurb in describing these works and they are exactly that. The recorded sound is excellent, the booklet notes adequate but somewhat technical in nature. At the bargain Naxos price, these discs are a terrific buy.

01_Hoeppner_American_FluteAmerican Flute Masterpieces
Susan Hoeppner; Lydia Wong
Marquis 774718141323

This CD is itself a little masterpiece: the six works on it by 20th century American composers, already recorded by many other flutists, are performed with such style, panache, and artistry that it is a welcome and justified addition to the catalogue.

The first track is the opening movement of Eldin Burton’s Sonatina. Susan Hoeppner’s phrasing is mesmerizing, to the point that I want to play this over and over again! Her interpretation of the Canzone from the second movement of Samuel Barber’s Piano Concerto is serene and measured, but perhaps a little too dispassionate. The most wonderful moments in the entire CD, for me anyway, come in the second movement of Lowell Liebermann’s Sonata Op.23. Hoeppner and Lydia Wong build on the strength of each other’s playing to come to a thrilling and almost superhuman intensity. Their performance of John Corigliano’s Voyage, while embracing the simplicity of the piece, infuses it with great sensitivity and tenderness and at times intensity that arises entirely out of the sound and colour of the flute. Hoeppner and Wong give stirring performances of the last two compositions, Aaron Copland’s lyrical Duo for Flute and Piano and Robert Muczynski’s technically challenging Sonata Op.14.

This CD brings us definitive performances of music from an ongoing “golden age” of composition in the United States, which continues to thrive in the protective enclaves of universities despite the vicissitudes of these tumultuous times. Kudos to both artists; this CD is a winner.

02a_Tim_Brady_102b_Tim_Brady_224 Frames - Scatter
Tim Brady; Bradyworks
ambiences magnetiques AM 206 CD www.timbrady.ca

 

24 Frames - Trance
Tim Brady; Martin Messier
ambiences magnetiques AM 203 CD-DVD www.timbrady.ca

Tim Brady’s most ambitious composition to date must surely be 24 Frames consisting of a series of 24 movements each of which he identifies as a “frame.” Adding up to three CDs and a DVD (AM 905), it amounts to well over two hours of sometime meditatively calm and at other times challenging and exhilarating music. While a soprano voice, baritone sax, bass clarinet, viola, bass trombone and percussion make appearances one at a time in substantial though supporting roles, the through-line here is Brady’s writing for electric guitar and his masterful virtuoso playing in every section of his sprawling opus.

Indeed the 8’53” section called “Scatter – Frame 1” could easily stand as a self-contained work. Featuring the nuanced vocalise of Karen Young, her vocal performance is so densely processed at times that it becomes a virtual choir. Yet Brady reminds us that this is a human voice first and foremost, by having vocalist Young imitate a wow-wow pedal effect acoustically about halfway in. It only lasts a moment but for me it is such deft and delicate touches which impress the most in 24 Frames. At the end of this section the guitar’s distant bell-like sonorities admirably support Young’s soft cooing.

Frame 2 is subtitled “In Almost Unison” and it’s an apt description of the relentless tempo guisto and metrically complex character of the joint duo of guitar and baritone sax, marvellously played by Jean-Marc Bouchard. Frame 3 on the other hand, featuring Lori Freedman’s dramatic bass clarinet, has many more contrasting angles and emotional facets to it.

Frame 4 – “Still” is a highlight, a lyrical, spacey and languid essay in viola long tones, chords and slow, surprisingly moody mid-20th century melodic passages. It’s underpinned by a lexicon of exposed delicate electric guitar effects: I heard reverb, precise string harmonics, thick gong-like chords, chorus effects and perhaps even pitch-shifted other-worldly echoes. This is a gorgeous, satisfying movement that I’ll be returning to repeatedly.

Frame 5 partners the electric guitar with bass trombone, in several sections juicily modulated with electronic effects. Indeed an outstanding aspect of this movement, as well as several others, is the astonishing range of the blend between the acoustic sounds of the instruments and their sounds electronically morphed.

The sonic shape-shifting continues in Frame 6 which introduces percussionist Catherine Meunier into the mix. She plays the vibraphone and afterward the marimba joined by Brady’s electric guitar, providing a welcome crisp contrast to several of the previous atmospheric sections, many of which did not posses a definable pulse. Here we have melodic lines, many founded on broken arpeggios, which sometimes interlock between instruments. At other moments the duo sounds in melodic and/or rhythmic unison, set in an increasingly complex metric and spectral framework. This first CD culminates in a satisfying crescendo supported by a sort of electric guitar trill stretto perhaps referencing heavy metal.

Reviewing such an immense, assured and accomplished work – and I’ve only touched on about a third of it – is truly an insurmountable challenge given the constraints of this review. I hope my listening notes have successfully reflected the scope of Brady’s fertile compositional imagination, and my own pleasure and enthusiasm for the music in his multi-CD project.

02_Melissa_LaurenThe Other Side
Melissa Lauren
Independent ML1111 (www.melissalaurenmusic.ca)

Singer-songwriter Melissa Lauren has been a part of the Toronto music community for a few years now, but with her sophomore release, The Other Side, she’s really making her mark. Lauren has a beguiling voice that mixes sweet playfulness with solid technique, control and range. Which would be plenty, but on top of that she has songwriting abilities that put her in another category from the legion of lovely crooners who enlist others’ work to tell their musical story. Harmonically speaking, Lauren’s songwriting doesn’t push a whole lot of boundaries, and she’s got a clever way with words that goes enough beyond cute to make things interesting without getting overly heavy. All of which suits the breezy, jazzy air of the album. The dozen songs each have a whiff of a bygone era hovering somewhere between the 1930s and the 60s, without being too derivative of any time or genre. So we get a bit of Mancini-esque cool on the opening Art Class, a touch of twangy longing on Somehow, a slightly Eastern European edge to Your Fool and an old tyme rollick from the title track. It all adds up to a special sound, much of the credit for which should be shared with guitarist Nathan Hiltz who is the main instrumental support and negotiates the shifts in style with taste and personality that never overwhelms. The rhythm section is ably rounded out by Ernesto Cervini on drums and Ross MacIntyre on bass. Lauren’s CD release event is March 1 at The Rex in Toronto. Check melissalaurenmusic.ca for details.


Over the past few years as post-modernism has made anything fair game for musical interpretation, sophisticated improviser/composers have taken inspiration from the most unlikely sources, far beyond the motifs, historicism and pastels of earlier times. Canadian bassist in New York Michael Bates for instance, has organized a salute to Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-75), using his own music and variants on the modern Russian composer’s oeuvre. Iconoclastic American composer/saxophonist Fred Ho has produced a five-part suite honouring boxer Muhammad Ali (b.1942) as a militant, outspoken fighter for social justice. The luminous canvases of American visual artist Cy Twombly (1928-2011) stimulate Israeli saxophonist Ariel Shibolet’s creativity, while Polish saxophonist Adam Pierończyk recasts in his own fashion the distinctive film scores of composer Krzysztof Komeda (1931-69).

01_Bates_AcrobatMichael Bates’ masterful arrangements on Acrobat: Music For, and By, Dmitri Shostakovich (Sunnyside SSC 1291 www.sunnysiderecords.com) are so perceptive that during the course of nine tracks he almost reveals symphonic colours using only a top-flight quintet: his double bass; the perfectly timed drums of Tom Rainey; Russ Lossing’s shuddering smears from electric and regular pianos; trumpeter Russ Johnson’s brassy blasts; and the fluid lyricism of Chris Speed’s sax and clarinet. This is apparent from the first track, “Dance of Death,” from Shostakovich’s Piano Trio No.2 in E Minor. Very quickly the bouncy melody is transformed with plunger trumpet work and well-modulated reed trills to a motif that’s as much 1970s Miles Davis as it is a mazurka. Later Silent Witness uses fusion references to atmospherically suggest the composer’s Stalin-era paranoia, with Speed’s singular reed slurs becoming progressively lower-pitched and tonal as Rainey`s drums smack and rebound while Lossing’s ratcheting licks make it seem as if he’s playing electric guitar not piano. Held together by Bates’ reliable thumping, the cacophonous final section gives way to repeated theme variations and conclusive keyboard echoes. Elsewhere, with music derived from the Russian composer’s work or not, the tunes use varied strategies. Intermezzos can be atmospheric and formal, with the reedist approximating oboe-like burrs and timed runs arising from Lossing’s acoustic instrument; as loose and swinging as a Benny Goodman-led combo; or exploding with tougher near-Jazz Messengers-like harmonies. Arcangela is another highpoint, allowing both Russes sufficient solo space. The pianist showcases a series of repeated glissandi centred by Bates’ stentorian pulse; while the trumpeter’s capillary slurs evolve into a quicksilver flow cushioned by harmonized keyboard and reed textures. All in all the wrap-around themes simultaneously celebrate Shostakovich’s intent while exposing improvisations that are true to jazz’s ethos.

02_Komeda_PieronczykTransforming the sounds of another musician, whose short-lived but prolific career defined Polish jazz, popular and even notated sounds for years after his untimely death, is the task of Krakow-based tenor and soprano saxophonist Adam Pierończyk on Komeda-The Innocent Sorcerer (JazzWerkstatt JW 104 www.jazzwerstatt.eu). Luckily he has the help of Brazilian guitarist Nelson Veras, countryman Łukasz Żyta on percussion, including typewriter (!) plus two American veterans, bassist Anthony Cox and tenor saxophonist Gary Thomas. Actually it’s Veras who often sets the pace, since his delicate nylon-string strumming brings a bossa nova-like lilt to, and encourages equivalent horn harmonies on, later-period Komeda tunes like After the Catastrophe. Two of Komeda’s best-known themes are treated most substantially by the quintet: Sleep Safe and Warm used in Rosemary’s Baby and Crazy Girl from Knife in the Water. Typewriter sounds produced by Żyta underlie contrasting rubato split tones from Thomas’ tenor and Pierończyk’s soprano sax obbligato during variants on the first tune. Meanwhile sul ponticello bass work makes the theme more menacing, with the piece reaching a crescendo of sharp guitar licks and overlapping horn parts, drastically truncated as the sound of a typewriter’s carriage return completes the track. Bustling cool jazz-like harmonies give way to contrapuntal horn vamping, rapid twangs from the guitarist and broken-metre drumming on Crazy Girl. With the percussionist waving Latin percussion and Cox sliding up and down his strings, Thomas’ hard-toned blowing and Pierończyk’s parallel tongue fluttering define the song’s repeated motif, as the two reedists circle back to recap and draw out the initial head.

03_Fred_HoMoving on from celebrating masterful musicians’ compositional influences to appreciating the political subtext of someone dubbed “Athlete of the Century,” is The Sweet Science Suite (Mutable/Big Red Media 003 www.bigredmediainc.com), a five-part suite Fred Ho composed for his 19-piece Green Monster Big Band. An activist as well as a musician, Ho’s arrangements are as outstanding and unique as Muhammad Ali’s boxing style. Unafraid of outside references, on Shake up the World the piece’s staccato exposition quotes liberally from Cream’s Sunshine of Your Love for a proper period feel, although that theme is intertwined with vamping section work echoing the Count Basie band, a funky backbeat, fiery brass triplets and a slinky boppish tenor sax solo. Other variants, such as Rope-A-Dope frame Salim Washington’s muscular big-toned tenor saxophone in a lusty big band arrangement that’s part ballad and part free form. Still other tunes expose and bury references to interludes ranging from Chinese court music to American TV show themes, to speeding train-like riffs plus Charles Mingus’ particular blend of gospel and blues. Other examples of bravura (over)blowing include Ho’s double-tonguing a staccatissimo baritone sax interlude from pedal point to altissimo range that is outlined clearly among brass fanfares and gruff snorts from two bass trombones plus broken beats from percussionist Royal Hartigan. The climactic key to the suite is the constantly expanding No Vietnamese Ever Called Me a Nigger, where Hartigan’s stylized gongs and hammered cross tones suggest the sounds of the Vietnam War that Ali avoided, costing him his championship status. Throughout the more-than-16-minute narrative, sonic interpolations, encompassing split-second theme inferences, bluesy harmonies from the six-piece sax section, twanging guitar riffs, discordant trumpet blasts, pedal-point bass trombone snorts and a final, unexpected, smoothing coda describe the discordance of the era and its final resolution. This resolution, personified by abrasive guitar solos and split-tone reed explosions, leads to Worthy of Praises Most High, a concluding theme that acknowledges Ali’s undiminished skill. Triumphantly fortissimo and atonal, the finale highlights guitarist Amanda Monaco’s rock-like chording arching over sequences of juddering pitch dislocation from brass triplets until decisive orchestral calmness prevails.

04_Shibolet_MarriageIn contrast to the other CDs’ inspirations, Ariel Shibolet’s Scenes from an Ideal Marriage (Kadima Collective KCR 28 www.kadimacollective.com) expresses in music his interpretation of Cy Twombly’s acrylic and pencil painting of the same name. Part of a trilogy of CDs by the tenor saxophonist dedicated to the recently deceased visual artist, Scenes also features violist Nori Jacoby. Despite obvious differences, like partners in an ideal marriage, the timbres from Shibolet’s soprano saxophone and Jacoby’s viola are sometimes indistinguishable, especially when involved in intertwined dialogue. At times polyphonic, polytonal or polyharmonic, the instruments’ textures mix without blending or losing individual identities. Masterful in his use of multiphonics, the reedist lip burbles, pushes unaccented air through his horn’s body tube, hums through his mouthpiece while sounding a tone, and squawks wet glissandi. Meantime the fiddler’s strategy involves sul ponticello scrapes, flying spiccato scrubs and jagged, angled vibrations. By the time the climactic second theme variant is heard, Shibolet’s pinched ney-like whistles and Jacoby’s sul tasto strokes surmount abrasive atonalism. The defining intermezzo is unexpectedly lyrical in contrast to the exposition, but doesn’t neglect pressure for prettiness. When each player’s timbres become as thin as pencil strokes, the subsequent split tones (from the saxist) and angled strokes (from the violist) stretch the sound without breaking it and eventually combine for wide-bore smears which advance then conclude the recitation.

Sonic inspiration can come from anywhere. It’s up to the canny improviser to do the best he or she can with it, as these musicians demonstrate.

01_Mahler_DVDLast month some of us, in fact many of us around the world, “attended” the MET’s production of Gotterdammerung, the final opera of their “Ring Cycle” live in HD at local movie houses. The conductor was Fabio Luisi who has taken over at the MET from the incapacitated James Levine. Luisi can be seen and heard on many CDs and DVDs, one example of which is a live performance of Mahler’s First Symphony that is outstanding in every way. The concert took place in the Philharmonie in Gasteig, Munich, with the Staatskapelle Dresden of which he was the music director at the time, in April 2008. From the first few bars of the first movement Luisi emerges as a true Mahlerian. His tempos and pacing are flawless as are the dynamics. It’s a gift to know what to do between the notes and, at least here, Luisi gets it. When he lets the orchestra out in the coda of the fourth movement the effect is spectacular in the grand manner. Earlier, the concert opens with a performance of the Beethoven Piano Concerto No.1 with pianist Margarita Hohenrieder. Her brilliant performance is engaging, witty and animated, proving that one can play Beethoven and smile at the same time. She and Luisi are on exactly the same page (EuroArts DVD 2057718).

Back to the MET …

Some of their productions have been issued on DVD by other companies but recently the MET has begun issuing selected performances from their archives that were broadcast live. The tapes of the selected performances are produced, transferred, restored and re-mastered by the MET themselves. Sony, who publishes them, has issued eight new two-CD sets since our first reviews some months ago and, as before, offer singers and conductors no longer with us.

02a_Bizet_Carmen02b_Offenbach_HoffmannRisë Stevens, one of the favourites of the day, stars with Richard Tucker and Nadine Connor in Bizet’s Carmen, conducted by Fritz Reiner in the performance of February 16, 1952 (Sony 88697 96189). Reiner was then a staff conductor at the MET but a year later he was appointed music director of the Chicago Symphony, a post that lasted for an illustrious ten years. Risë Stevens and Richard Tucker are featured again in Offenbach’s Les Contes d’Hoffmann with an all star cast including Roberta Peters, Lucine Amara, James McCracken and Martial Singher conducted by Pierre Monteux (88697 96190). This production was broadcast live on December 3, 1955, and the sound, as it is in all these sets, is clean and clear monaural, complete with some sounds of stage business that contributes, for me at least, to the illusion. In this case, however, the home listener of the time would not have heard the fidelity we have here. Hoffmann is one of my favourite operas and I listen to it regularly. This production does in no way disappoint.

03_Thomas_MignonRisë Stevens is joined by James Melton, Mimi Benzell and Ezio Pinza for Thomas Mignon from January 27, 1945 (88697 96192). Canadian Wilfrid Pelletier is the conductor and Pinza, who would retire from the Met in 1948 after 22 years, was still four years away from playing Emil de Beque. Handsome James Melton was a popular tenor in the 20s and 30s until the popularity of ballad singers and the romantic repertoire declined. He sang at the MET in suitable roles for just a few years only and here is a rare chance to hear him.

04_Donizetti_FilleDonizetti’s La Fille du Régiment was once the property of Lily Pons and here she is on December 28, 1940 assisted by Raoul Jobin, Salvatore Baccaloni and others conducted by Gennero Papi (88697 96191). It is the great bass Baccaloni as Suplice who dominates every time he opens his mouth and Lily Pons and the rest of the cast are swamped. Still, she has her moments and the whole production is good fun. Very good sound, too.

05_ErnaniMoving into the 1960s, the usual suspects included Carlo Bergonzi, Leontyne Price, Cornell MacNeil, Carlotta Ordassy, Giorgio Tozzi, Roald Reitin and Robert Nagy and here they are in Verdi’s Ernani from December 1, 1962 under Thomas Schippers (88691 90996). The opera is basically about ill-fated lovers … the same old story of girl meets bandido, conspirators, revenge, the Holy Roman Empire and 16th century Spanish politicking. A good plot for an opera which this cast makes believable. A new production was seen in HD in movie theatres on February 25 with an encore presentation for those who missed it, or wish to see it again, coming up on March 31.

06_LElisirFrom March 5, 1966, we have Roberta Peters, Carlo Bergonzi, Frank Guarrera and Fernando Corena in Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore conducted by Thomas Schippers (88691 90991). Love makers again, this time between a “poor villager and the beautiful, alluring landowner; the pair exude charm and vivacity...” It’s an amusing story with many comic situations that the cast have a great time conveying to the audience.

07_Luisa_MillerThomas Schippers also conducts Verdi’s Luisa Miller from February 17, 1968, featuring Sherrill Milnes, Montserrat Caballé, Richard Tucker, Ezio Flagello and Giorgio Tozzi … a dream cast if there ever was one (88691 90994). This opera is a fine example of love – both requited and unrequited – deception and betrayal, with a tragic last scene. In other words, melodrama at its best. The artistry of the entire ensemble draws the listener in and holds on until the final curtain.

08_CavalleriaFinally, the double bill of “Cav & Pag,” Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci broadcast on April 14, 1954 (88691 90999). “Cav” features Richard Tucker, Eileen Farrell, Lili Chookasian, Cesare Bardelli and Mildred Miller. “Pag” stars Anselmo Colzani, Franco Corelli, Franco Ghitti, Lucine Amara and Calvin Marsh. Nello Santi conducts. The evening could not have been in better hands. Each singer brings his or her character to life, reacting seamlessly to the various situations. These really are marvelous performances.

Concert Notes: You can hear an abridged version of La Fille du Régiment at the University of Toronto Faculty of Music’s annual Opera Tea at MacMillan Theatre on April 1. The Canadian Opera Company presents The Tales of Hoffmann in performances at the Four Seasons Centre April 10 to May 14.

 

04_schubertSchubert - Piano Sonatas in A Minor D784; B-Flat Major D960
Boris Zarankin
Doremi DHR-71153

If the listener didn’t know it before, this CD confirms that Boris Zarankin possesses an ardent empathy with Schubert. From the opening bars of the first movement of the great Sonata in B-Flat Major, marked molto moderato, there is almost a quasi religious awakening and, as the music unfolds, further dimensions are revealed that one does not hear in other versions of this familiar work. Well, not quite. Hearing Zarankin conjured up the performance by Valery Afanassiev recorded live at the Lockenhaus Festival in 1986 that has lingered in my memory as an interpretation with the same intense, poetic introversion. However, listening to that performance once again, as attractive as it is, Zarankin is the more poetic, realizing the tragedy of Schubert playing out the last chapter of his life.

In both sonatas Boris Zarankin is in a class of his own, fully justifying his venturing into such frequently charted repertoire. Zarankin has his own ideas about playing these sonatas but I sense that they are also Schubert’s.

These recordings were made last August in Glenn Gould Studio in Toronto and engineered by Clive Allen who is responsible for the eminently truthful and dynamic, wide-range sound.

58_sallis-frontcover-colourCentre and Periphery, Roots and Exile: Interpreting the Music of István Anhalt, György Kurtág, and Sándor Veress
edited by Friedemann Sallis, Robin Elliott, and Kenneth DeLong
Wilfrid Laurier University Press
480 pages, score examples; $85.00

In 2005, István Anhalt’s The Tents of Abraham won the JUNO Award for best Canadian classical composition of the year. It was remarkable for such a provocative, uncompromising and politically ambitious piece. But it seemed even more remarkable, because for the 54 years Anhalt had lived in Canada, as William Benjamin points out in this collection of essays, his music had been almost totally neglected by performers and audiences in his adopted homeland.

Anhalt is one of the three composers, along with Sándor Veress and György Kurtág, whose relationship to the place of his roots, and the process of displacement that took him away, is looked at. But the ideas of place and displacement are treated not just as physical states. As Gordon Smith writes, “They also embody metaphorical ideas of being and dwelling, and ideas pertaining to danger, persecution, exile, adaption, and the resultant imperative discovery of others and the emergent self.”

Anhalt, Veress, and Kurtág were all born in Hungary and all studied in Budapest at the Franz Liszt Academy — Anhalt and Veress with Zoltán Kodály, and Kurtág with Veress. All left Hungary, having survived the war and the subsequent Soviet occupation of their homeland. Anhalt and Veress left soon after the war ended, but Kurtág, who is younger, didn’t leave until 1993. Anhalt and Kurtág are Jewish, and all three are haunted by a past which is memorialized in their music.

These 20 papers by various academics, composers and performers were first presented at a symposium at the University of Calgary in 2008. To set the scene, there’s a lovely musical tribute to Veress, who died in Switzerland in 1992, by his son, Claudio Veress. Kurtág, who has the greatest international reputation of the three, is recalled in an insightful reminiscence by his godson, Hungarian-born Canadian pianist Gergely Szokolay. Anhalt, now 93 years old and living in Kingston, Ontario, where he spent many years teaching at Queen’s University, contributes a brief personal memoir to complement John Beckwith’s astute portrait, and emerges as a thoroughly fascinating figure.

The strength of this probing collection lies in the way the various approaches to place and displacement offer insights into interpreting key works by these three composers. But the connection between Anhalt, Veress and Kurtág is left unexplored — only Friedemann Sallis’s introduction links them together. Otherwise, each paper deals with an individual composer and his own milieu. So in the end I was left wanting to know more about how the shared roots and experiences of these three composers influenced the development of their individual styles.

Concert Note: The Toronto Symphony Orchestra will perform Kurtág’s Messages on Thursday March 1 in Roy Thomson Hall, as part of their New Creations Festival, curated by Hungarian composer Peter Eötvös.

58_kaija_saariahocmyk_cmykKaija Saariaho: Visions, Narratives, Dialogues
edited by Tim Howell with Jon Hargreaves and Michael Rofe
Ashgate Publishing Company
238 pages, score samples; $99.95 US

Like István Anhalt, Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho has spent most of her career outside her homeland. But unlike Anhalt, she left under no duress, having benefited from Finland’s supportive culture and enlightened political values.

This collection of essays charts the development of Saariaho’s distinctive voice as a composer, with its unusual sensual beauty, expressive power and emotional directness. “Harmony, texture and timbre: those three things were then, and still are, at the heart of my musical thinking,” Saariaho says in the interview with Tom Service included here. In her stage works — three operas and an oratorio so far — she creates something new and challenging, with inventive, unclichéd storytelling and innovative use of painting, mime, lighting, electronic sounds and pre-recorded materials. Yet traditional musical devices are also part of her operatic language. As Liisamaija Hautsalo writes, “The musical topics within Saariaho’s works, often modified into the musical language of our time, could be described as whispers from the past: a link between tradition and the composer’s individual expression.”

A number of writers discuss how dreams play an essential part in Saariaho’s work. While L’Amour de loin (Love from Afar) features a dream scene, the whole opera can be seen, as Anni Iskala describes it, as “an opera about dreaming of, and loving, the unattainable.” In fact, dreams have been a direct source of inspiration right from Saariaho’s earliest works like From the Grammar of Dreams, and, starting with Im Traume, she has used her own dream diaries to provide material.

While these eight essays and the interview with the composer provide an invaluable perspective on Saariaho’s music, they do not attempt to situate her music in today’s contemporary music scene. The contributors are all from either Finland or England — oddly there are none from France, where she has lived since coming to Paris as a student in 1982.

It’s certainly noteworthy that when the Canadian Opera Company produces L’Amour de loin in February, it will be the first opera by that company written in the 21st century. Even more noteworthy, this will be the first opera written by a woman to be produced on their main stage. Even though Saariaho resists being defined as a woman composer — or as any type of composer, for that matter — she has never stepped back from breaking down barriers, as this book shows.

Concert Notes: On Monday January 30, Soundstreams presents soprano Carla Huhtanen performing music by Kaija Saariaho at 7:30pm in the Gardiner Museum.

On Tuesday January 31 at 12pm, Soundstreams presents the Elmer Iseler Singers performing Saariaho’s Tag des Jahrs and soprano Carla Huhtanen performing the Leino Songs, as well as chamber works by the composer in the Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre.

On Thursday February 2 at 12pm in the Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre, artists of the COC Ensemble studio perform vocal works by Saariaho, including From the Grammar of Dreams and Lohn (From Afar). These performances will be introduced by Saariaho.

On Thursday February 2 and Friday February 3 at 8pm in Koerner Hall, Soundstreams presents Saariaho’s Tag des Jahrs, performed by the Elmer Iseler Singers under Lydia Adams.

To make room for the best of the wealth of material received over the holiday break and to accommodate the addition of three wonderful new reviewers to our fold, I find I have left insufficient space for my own musings this month. So let me just take a moment to introduce to these pages pianist and pedagogue Christina Petrowska Quilico who shares insights on a new release by her colleague Stephen Hough; composer and tuba virtuoso J. Scott Irvine who opines on a CD of contemporary tuba and euphonium repertoire from Deanna Swoboda; and my own chamber music coach and mentor, violinist Ivana Popovich who gives us her take on the Tokyo Quartet’s recent Schubert release. Welcome aboard to one and all!

We welcome your feedback and invite submissions. CDs and comments should be sent to: The WholeNote, 503 – 720 Bathurst St. Toronto ON M5S 2R4. We also encourage you to visit our website www.thewholenote.com where you can find added features including direct links to performers, composers and record labels, “buy buttons” for on-line shopping and additional, expanded and archival reviews.

David Olds, DISCoveries Editor
discoveries@thewholenote.com

03_mahagonnyWeill - Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny
Measha Brueggergosman; Jane Henschel; Michael König; Willard White; Teatro Real Madrid; Pablo Heras-Casado
BelAir BAC067

Kurt Weill’s music stands alone and needs no visuals to covey its brilliant, contemporary and relevant meaning. That said, his stage works always assault the senses when produced well – especially when accompanied by the words of his most famous collaborator, Bertold Brecht. Mahagonny, immortalized by the countless renditions of the “Alabama Song,” is so much more than the simple morality play that many perceive it as. It is a work, which especially in this brilliant production satirizes, troubles and challenges the viewer. In these years of market crashes and the disenfranchised “99%” its resonance is as fresh as it must have been in the Weimar Republic. The stunning sets, including a verdant golf course – surely as much of a power centre as one can imagine – create the backdrop to the all too human struggle with that “crime of crimes” – not having money in the materialistic world. Jane Henschel as the widow Begbick and Canada’s own Measha Brueggergosman as Jenny Smith form a powerful female axis of the performance, with Brueggergosman taking refreshing risks with the score. Michael König (Jim MacIntyre) and Willard White (Trinity Moses) in the meantime, complete the play’s – and music’s – symmetry. The orchestra delivers the score beautifully, with a strangely appropriate Spanish verve. This is truly an “edge of your seat” opera experience, even without the original German rhythms of speech. Bravo.

04_britten_warBritten - War Requiem
Edith Wiens; Nigel Robson; Håkan Hagegård; Prague Philharmonic Choir; Ankor Children’s Choir; Israel Philharmonic Orchestra; Kurt Masur
Heilicon Classics 02-9645

Ominous sounds issuing from the lower depths of the strings with the insistent tolling of bells and the tenor‘s desperate question “what passing bells for those who die as cattle?” – so begins the pacifist Benjamin Britten’s mass for the dead, a passionate antiwar statement written in 1962 for the opening of the newly rebuilt Coventry Cathedral. The ingenious idea to combine the Latin text, the basic underpinning structure of the mass, with poems of dark, terrifying imagery of the war in the trenches is what distinguishes Britten’s work from other requiems of the past. The poems of Wilfred Owen, an English foot soldier who was killed a week before the fighting ended in 1918 are what give this piece its unforgettable poignancy and impact.

Nothing but praise can be given to this spectacular new recording produced in Israel whose people have suffered and continue to suffer from the ravages of war. In the tradition begun by the composer himself, Kurt Masur, a former director of the Leipziger Gewandhaus, commands the massive ensemble of forces (full symphony orchestra, chamber orchestra, several choruses and three soloists) with precision, clear insight and passionate understanding. The deafening sounds of war in the “Dies Irae” section, martial trumpets and horns with rumbling bass drums emulating the roar of cannons and snare drums imitating the rattle of machine gun fire, sound frighteningly real.

But the soul of the piece is in the singing. The Latin text is carried by the mixed choruses and the boys’ choir as well as the female soloist, Canadian soprano of international repute Edith Wiens. Her wailing lament, for example in the “Lacrimosa” is heartbreaking. In stark contrast, Owen’s verses in the declamatory style of the English language are sung by the tenor Nigel Robson and baritone Håkan Hagegård. Their precise diction, annunciation of remarkable clarity and emotional involvement rival that legendary first recording by Peter Pears and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau of 1963, under the composer’s baton.

05_britten_blakeBritten - Songs & Proverbs of William Blake
Gerald Finley; Julius Drake
Hyperion CDA67778

The songs of Britten naturally conjure up the memory of Peter Pears, Britten’s partner, muse and greatest influence. The celebrated tenor was also the poetry consultant to the composer and their shared tastes shaped Britten’s output. But there were other voices he composed for. One of the most significant ones was Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, the wonderful baritone. Just like in his operas, from Billy Budd to Death in Venice, Britten approaches the baritone voice in these songs with a lyricism usually reserved for the tenor. Given that and the special nature of Blake’s poetry, it isn’t any voice that can tackle this material. Fortunately, Gerald Finley possesses a baritone worthy of comparisons with Fischer-Dieskau. It may not sound like an insightful comment, but Finley’s baritone is simply elegant. His phrasing and understated ornamentation bring a fully engaged understanding to the texts. What makes this disc even more interesting is that it contains Britten’s settings spanning a lifetime – from the revised early compositions of a 14-year-old boy to late-in-life, mature compositions and finally some published posthumously. Whether you are familiar with Britten’s songs, or Blake’s poetry for that matter, you will appreciate the intelligent, focused reading of the material in the Finley-Drake collaboration. And you will love the sound that the two artists create – love it enough to come back to this record again and again.

07_bridge_of_dreamsA Bridge of Dreams - A Cappella Music from the Pacific Rim
Ars Nova Copenhagen; Paul Hillier
Dacapo 6.220597

Curious and delightfully captivating, this recording by the 14-voice Ars Nova Copenhagen ensemble under Paul Hillier presents a programme by (mostly Western) composers of music from the Pacific Rim.

Hillier’s credentials rest largely on his years of work in early music. His ability to cope with challenging contemporary repertoire, however, leaves no doubt about his extraordinary musicianship. While his programme for this recording is well balanced – including works by New Zealander Jack Body, Australians Anne Boyd and Ross Edwards, American Lou Harrison and Lui Sola, a multi-disciplinary artist from China – two works really deserve special mention.

Harrison’s Mass for St. Cecilia’s Day is tinged strongly by his attraction to Chinese and Indonesian music. The Latin text, sung in an obvious plainsong style, is frequently embellished by modal phrasings and ornaments from the Oriental world. The effect of this fusion is surprisingly compelling. One is never quite sure if what’s being sung is ancient or modern. Harrison’s skilful writing moves effortlessly through an in-between realm where he creates something new from something ancient.

Edwards’ Sacred Kingfisher Psalms also combine otherwise unrelated material into a remarkable composition. Using portions of Latin psalm texts, Edwards pays homage to the aboriginal spirit of his homeland by weaving the native names of indigenous birds into his Latin text. The chanting evokes ancient aboriginal rituals as well medieval European polyphonies.

Harrison’s and Edwards’ works appear to practice some kind of musical alchemy and do so with the skilful formulation of Ars Nova’s choral ingredient.

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