Sean Noonan Pavees Dance – Tan Man’s Hat – RareNoise 

Sean Noonan Pavees Dance – Tan Man’s Hat – RareNoise 

Sean Noonan Pavees Dance – Tan Man’s Hat – [TrackList follows] – RareNoise RNR106, 65:14 [3/29/19] ****:

The term ‘otherworldly’ gets used a lot. It’s entirely appropriate for the 65-minute, nine-track album Tan Man’s Hat from drummer Sean Noonan and his quintet Pavees Dance. This is futuristic material with a science fiction foundation which mixes poetic spoken-word elements, neo-jazz, progressive rock and avant-garde slices. Tan Man’s Hat is the sophomore release for Sean Noonan Pavees Dance and once again Noonan pairs up with vocalist/visual artist Malcolm Mooney (co-founder of krautrockers Can) and bassist Jamaaladeen Tacuma (Ornette Coleman’s Prime Time, James Blood Ulmer, others). Joining this version of Noonan’s ensemble is experimentalist guitarist Ava Mendoza (who has recorded or been on stage with Carla Bozulich, Fred Frith, Nels Cline, Tacuma, Mike Watt, and more) and keyboardist Alex Marcelo, a longtime Noonan collaborator who was in a previous Noonan-led group. These five noisemakers create music which is a harmolodic jazz-rock conglomeration, taking Coleman’s musical ideas into a new frontier. The band name Pavees Dance comes from Noonan’s Irish heritage. Pavees are nomadic travelers who make items from available materials, a stimulus Noonan brings to his atypical compositions, which are an amalgam of eclectic inspirations. Noonan explains, “That fits in perfectly with the wandering storyteller concept I’ve been developing throughout my work, merging West African and Irish storytelling traditions. The name Pavees Dance really embodies that.” Tan Man’s Hat  can be purchased as a four-panel CD digipack; various digital downloads; and as a gatefold, 12-inch heavyweight green vinyl LP (with digital download code). The fantastical cover artwork was done by Mooney. This review refers to the CD.

This is collective music which often crosses from pre-planned to complete spontaneity. That includes the lyrics. Mooney works with written text the way a jazz musician manipulates an instrument, diving into improvisatory voyages. “Malcolm develops or adapts lyrics on the spot,” Noonan clarifies. “I gave him a road map for each of the songs and then let him do his thing. He shaped his own stories from the ideas that I gave him, which was a really meaningful way for me to develop as a lyricist and to evolve myself artistically.” The album commences with the cosmic trek narrative, “Boldly Going,” where Mooney sing-speaks about fearlessly going where no others have gone before, while the band generates careening, cyclic and energetic prog-jazz music. Another piece which has an intergalactic perspective is the roiling, rock-inclined “Girl from Another World” a hard-hitting track about an alien who visits our neck of the galaxy. Mendoza’s guitar pyrotechnics are a fiery and prominent highlight of “Girl from Another World.” The skittering, jumpy “Martian Refugee” continues the SF slant with a song about how the Earth might welcome outsiders from another planet. The group contributes a bouncy and tilted groove which accentuates the situation of accepting people who are different from us. While there is an undercurrent of a socio-political viewpoint which bubbles under “Martian Refugee,” there is a larger measure of current events commentary during the driving “Tell Me.” Over an urgent and pulsing arrangement, Mooney conveys his candid opinion about political and mass media untruths about the military-industrial complex. His repetition of “tell me” becomes an incantation as well as a protest.

The lengthiest tune, the nearly 11-minute “Turn Me Over,” is a whimsical example of the band’s skewed humor. Noonan and Mooney share a phantasmagorical tale about a genie set free from the grooves of a vinyl record. At times Pavees Dance takes off on several tangents, from burlesque-type music to prog-jazz inclinations to rock-based parts, while the song’s main character promises to grant a wish if someone will release him from the LP’s grooves. Not all the material is drawn from SF and/or fantasy. The intense “Gravity and the Grave” blends lyrics penned by both Mooney and Noonan, which explore the somberness of mortality and dreaming of the great beyond. The nine-minute, jazz-tinted “The End of the Inevitable” has a similar expiration-of-existence philosophical characteristic, where Mooney muses on lineage, seeing the termination of life’s journey and the possibility of crossing over to eternity. The shortest number is the five-minute title track, which is also the oldest. The lyrics date back to Mooney’s tenure in Can but was not completed during Mooney’s participation in Can. Noonan provided new music and the result is a unique blues/jazz/rock hybrid which accelerates with a lively arrangement which hints at times to various classic rock archetypes. The expressive and idiosyncratic Tan Man’s Hat concludes with “Winter Inside,” which starts in a reflective, melancholy mood (but includes a powerful midpoint) where Mooney declares hope, a desire for acceptance and romance, and a yearning for light in all its manifestations.

Musicians:
Malcolm Mooney – vocals; Jamaaladeen Tacuma – bass; Ava Mendoza – guitar; Alex Marcelo – keyboards; Sean Noonan – drums, vocals, co-producer

TrackList:

Boldly Going
Gravity and the Grave
Tell Me
Martian Refugee
Turn Me Over
Tan Man’s Hat
The End of the Inevitable
Girl from another World
Winter Inside

—Doug Simpson

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Sonny Stitt – Stitt Plays Bird – Speakers Corner 

Sonny Stitt – Stitt Plays Bird – Speakers Corner 

Sonny Stitt – Stitt Plays Bird – Speakers Corner LP 180 gram vinyl released May 2017 ( Original release 1963-Atlantic Records SD 1418) 35:46****

( Sonny Stitt – alto sax; John Lewis – piano; Jim Hall – guitar; Richard Davis – bass; Connie Kay – drums)

For those listeners who may have missed out on the LP Stitt Plays Bird ,when it was first released in 1963, now is your chance to rectify that oversight. Deliciously re-mastered by the German label Speakers Corner Records to bring out the full dynamics and sonic delight of the stereo recording, you are treated to Sonny Stitt and his be-bop cohorts run through eight Charlie Parker originals and one by Jay McShann ( in whose band Parker was first employed).

Additionally, the liner notes are by Ira Gitler ( who died on February 23, 2019, at 90)  and was one of the most respected jazz writers of the post war era as well as an early believer in be-bop music. Finally the album cover is a portrait of Stitt by noted American painter Marvin Israel, which is so flawlessly reproduced it could be suitable for framing.

The musicians surrounding Stitt, are anchored by two stalwarts of the Modern Jazz Quartet, pianist John Lewis and drummer Connie Kay plus  one of tastiest guitarists in jazz  Jim Hall, and the big toned bassist Richard Davis.

Much has been made about the influence that Charlie Parker had on the playing of Sonny Stitt. Although there was a closeness in style, and some of Stitt’s early solo work may have had some note for note Parker comparisons, Stitt was his own man, developing his own creativity and phrasing.  The opening track on Side One is “Ornithology” which is based on How High The Moon and a close listening may pick up some early Parker mannerisms. Guitarist Jim Hall has a glorious solo on this number.

“Scrapple From The Apple” uses chord changes from Honeysuckle Rose with  Hall and Stitt covering the line on both the introduction and the out chorus to the number. In between Stitt is both agile and aglow throughout his solo space.

“Parker’s Mood” is a slow blues on which Stitt is expressive and sure-footed. Pianist John Lewis, who had been involved with several prior recordings of the number including Parker’s original outing, offers ideal rapport that is both empathetic and lyrical.

If you listen closely as Side Two opens with “Ko-Ko” the changes of Ray Noble’s Cherokee are on full display. Stitt takes the number at full gallop and he does not gives up the reins throughout the piece.

Another all Stitt offering is “Confirmation” which has become a bebop standard. Filled with an array of complex and rapid chord changes, this composition is not for the faint of heart. Stitt never backed away from a challenge and he tackled the opportunity with his assertive style and cool-headed technical facility.

When Parker was in Jay McShann’s band in the early 1940s, they recorded one of McShannn’s compositions “Hootie Blues”. Stitt’s interpretation is of the low-down blues variety and he sets the stage accordingly.  Pianist Lewis, guitarist Hall, and bassist Davis are moved to add to the suggestive slow-burn attractiveness of the number.

Be-bop is spoken here.

TrackList:
Side One:
Ornithology
Scrapple From The Apple
My Little Suede Shoes
Parker’s Mood
Au Privave

Side Two:
Ko-Ko
Confirmation
Hootie Blues
Constellation

—Pierre Giroux

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Sarumba — Music of Peter Lieuwen – MSR Classics 

Sarumba — Music of Peter Lieuwen – MSR Classics 

LIEUWEN: Sarumba (2 violins and chamber orchestra); Chamber Symphony; Quad Concerto (clarinet and piano trio); Concerto Alfresco – Emeline Pierre, Lavard Skou Larsen, violins/ Deutsche Kammerakademie Neuss/ Slovak National Symphony Orchestra/ Franz Anton Krager/ Stephanie Key, clarinet/ Ertan Torgul, violin/ David Mollenaur, cello/ Carolyn True, piano/ Moores Symphony Orchestra/ Lavard Skou Larsen/ Allen Vizzutti, trumpet – MSR Classics MS 1583, 62:27 ****:

This is MSR’s third foray into the music of Peter Lieuwen, and another success. Lieuwen’s music is so refreshing–he is contemporary but with a well-knotted connection to the past that eludes labels like “neo-classic” and resists stereotyping. See my previous review and that of colleague Mel Martin for the first two discs in the series.

Lieuwen is rhythmically driven, dynamically subtle, French, Nordic, even Stravinskian in some of his harmonies, but always his own man. Sarumba uses a palette of multiple Brazilian rhythmic patterns drawing influence from rock, world music, and jazz, yet never settling into one of these long enough to define it. The two violins enjoy the competition with one another in this engaging and upbeat piece.

Supposedly taking its inspiration from the Georgian Orthodox hymn Thou art a vineyard (an Orthodox hymn that has been set many times in various national churches), Mary the Mother of God (“Theotokos”) is exalted here in a way that emphasizes love and nature in this three-movement rendered Chamber Symphony. This is the most stirring work on this disc.

The Quad Concerto, written for the SOLI Chamber Ensemble in San Antonio, Texas, is a marvelous work passing color, sound, and melodies from one member to another and playing a mix-and-match game with the soloists and orchestra. Again, an upbeat rhythmical activity is front and center as the driving element in the piece.

Concerto Alfresco is a welcome virtuoso piece for trumpet and orchestra that makes use of jazz and rock elements without allowing either to become a dominant force. Though improvisation is allowed, even with the standard chordal indications found in a jazz band improvisational chart, a stern classical rigor is maintained in the work to provide order and schematic functionality. It is zestful and thrilling, and I believe any trumpet player would be excited about taking it up. It was first prize winner at the 2013 Doc Severinsen International Composition Competition.

The sound is very good and consistent among the various ensembles and venues. I look forward to volume 4.

—Steven Ritter

 

WEINBERG: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 21 – Kremerata Baltica / Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla – DGG

WEINBERG: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 21 – Kremerata Baltica / Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla – DGG

WEINBERG: Symphony No. 2 for String Orchestra, Op. 30; Symphony No. 21, Op. 152 “Kaddish” – Kremerata Baltica/ Gidon Kremer, violin/ City of Birmingham Orchestra/ Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla, soprano and conductor – DGG 483 6566 (2 CDs), 34:21; 54:38 (5/3/19) [Distr. by Universal] ****:

In the New Grove Dictionary of Music, Boris Schwarz calls Polish composer Mieczyslaw Weinberg (1919-1996) a “conservative modernist.” Others would argue the opposite; but, moreover, many wrongly see in Weinberg an artful imitator of Shostakovich when, in fact, Weinberg more often than not influenced Shostakovich to assume the mantle of opposition to anti-Semitic oppression that marked Stalinist Russia after the horrors of Nazism. Yet the “romantic” Weinberg claimed in conversation that he could always see “the bright light in dark circumstances,” courting a potent optimism in his relentless faith in God. Though the clamor of war permeates his musical oeuvre, Weinberg manages a fluent, classical melodic gift, colorful, diversely instrumental, and rife with both folk energies and contrapuntal craftsmanship.

A sweet transparency infiltrates the Symphony No. 2, Op. 30 (1946). Its most immediate predecessor seems to be Josef Suk’s E Major Serenade, Op. 6, although the writing in Weinberg has a more strident, angular beauty. Gidon Kremer’s concertante violin weaves within the textures, which do become fiercely contrapuntal and impassioned. In three movements, the Allegro moderato expands moodily, thinning in sonority to pose intimate letters, as we find in Janacek.  Moments that breathe an atmosphere of Bartok pass by, but the nostalgia expresses itself in an idiosyncratic, Slavic manner, deep in the basses. The violin plays a vaguely serpentine, alluring melody as a repeated trope, sliding high in register to dissipate in long periods.

The second movement, Adagio, opens with a mid-voice melody lit somewhere between Schumann and Dvorak, but elongated in the manner of Bruckner. High strings answer, almost sounding, in their muted double-stopped fashion, like distant horns. The moodiness resembles those mesto movements we find in Bartok, but the melody traverses a series of colored registers to become illuminated. A huge, elongated chord yields to Kremer’s solo violin, a song in the desert. A cello answers, and the music resumes in dark, layered hues. A light, dainty gavotte-like tune emerges over plucked strings. This tune, too, extends itself, moving to the violin’ slow utterance that squeaks in diminished tones into the aether.

The last movement, Allegretto, proceeds with that vague, Shostakovich ethos, but allowing moments of light to invade its gauzy texture. Pizzicato riffs play, a la Tchaikovsky or ironic Benjamin Britten. The strings divide for a deep-toned melody and layered ostinatos of some polyphonic intensity. A martial urgency overtakes the music, now easily attributable to the Shostakovich bass-fiddle sonority.  More pizzicato figures comprise the progression, while Weinberg juxtaposes various effects a la Bartok that coalesce into the violin’s solo meditation. The hazy last minute of music leaves us in a limbo not too far from Debussy’s Nuages, but sadder and more uneasy.

Although “composed” in 1991, the Symphony No. 21 of Weinberg had a long gestation period that involved Weinberg’s having created music for the dark film The Lord’s Prayer, which depicts the fate of a Jewish mother and her son who seek refuge in the Warsaw Ghetto during WWII, only to meet their deaths. The Symphony evolves in one movement, subdivided into six sections, featuring a prominent solo violin part.  The melancholy, particularly Polish in character, sounds a monumental threnody, early quoting Chopin’s G minor Ballade. The opening solo violin hazily quotes the fifth song from Mahler’s Des Knaben Wunderhorn, “Mutter, ach Mutter, es hungert mich,” Oh Mother, I am hungry. The huge shifts in mood and dynamics embrace grim passages in chorale style, juxtaposed with klezmer melody set in diaphanous harmony with violin and piano (Georgis Osokins) and harp.

Akin to the Shostakovich Baba-Yar Symphony No. 13, the music bears a grave, tragic stamp of world catastrophe. Gidon Kremer calls the work “Mahler’s Eleventh Symphony.” The lone soprano voice dominates the musical context, supported by diverse chamber ensembles. The Allegro molto section projects the kind of frenetic, barbaric energy and grueling anguish we know from Shostakovich, tinged by brass, battery, and snare drum in layered, militant harmony. Agonized chords segue into the Largo section, sounding like demented Mussorgsky. Timbrel sounds rise up from the shattered world Weinberg has just wrought. Iurii Gavryiuk’s bass fiddle strikes some chords prior to random colors; then, the double bass indulges in a full cadenza that leads to brass intrusions and klezmer riffs in the clarinet (Oliver Jones). The dance becomes wild, Presto, a mad circus or spastic dance of death. Suddenly, Kremer’s lonely violin strikes “familiar” Jewish tones in concert with the clarinet and soft strings, leading to the sustained pedal of the Andantino.

Singular, staccato notes in various colors play against a mordant, Semitic chant. The three-note motto over the pedal assumes an eerie stasis, rife with Kafka-esque expectation. Weinberg imparts an anxious lyricism into this movement, a spirit similar to moods in Bartok or notes unstrung from Beethoven’s Grosse Fuge. The music suddenly becomes expansive, epic, convulsive. Clarion chords, bells, and snare announce the ghastly descent into the Lento finale.

Even Tchaikovsky and Mahler’s slow last movements fail to prepare us for the “descent into the emotional maelstrom.” This ghoulish threnody has the soprano voice sing in the manner of a wordless vocalise, echoed in the clarinet over pedal string chords. The sense of a disembodied spirit, alternatively harrowing and playful – “la, la, la” – invoking the violin and clarinet to join the cry or cosmic grimace, as you will, becomes mesmerizing and unnerving. The piano comes back with the Chopin reference, while a string chamber ensemble quotes from Weinberg’s own Fourth String Quartet, Op. 20. The last few minutes assume an epilogue character: wordless voice become hysterical, pedal tones, brass and battery, and heavy punctuations that protest or rage against the dying of the light.

—Gary Lemco

 

In Celebration of BACH – Kathleen Ferrier, contralto – Somm Ariadne 

In Celebration of BACH – Kathleen Ferrier, contralto – Somm Ariadne 

Kathleen Ferrier: In Celebration of BACH = Magnificat, BWV 243; Cantata No. 11 “Lobet Gott in seinen Reichen”; Cantata No. 67 “Halt im Gedaechtnis Jesum Christ”; Cantata No. 147 “Herz und mond und Tat und Leben” – Kathleen Ferrier, contralto/ Selected Soloists/ Vienna State Opera Choir/ Vienna Philharmonic/ Volkmar Andreae/ The Cantata Singers/ The Jacques Orchestra/ Dr. Reginald Jacques (BWV 11, 67) – Somm Ariadne 5004, 77:41 (4/19/19) [Distr. by Naxos] *****:

In 1950 Vienna, the International Bach Festival celebrated the composer’s bi-centenary with three major performances of St. Matthew Passion, B Minor Mass, and Magnificat, having invited – via Herbert von Karajan – British contralto Kathleen Ferrier (1912-1953) to participate, the only non-German speaker of some fifteen vocalists to take part in all three works.  For Kathleen Ferrier, her appearance in the Magnificat on 10 June would be her last; and for sixty-eight years the recorded performance had been lost and only now resurfaces for our edification.  The two 1950 Bach cantatas led by Dr. Reginald Jacques (1894-1969) had been issued on London Decca as ten-inch LPs, here remastered in fine sound. For the performance of the 1733 Magnificat revision the conductor is Swiss composer Volkmar Andreae (1879-1962), more often associated with scores by Anton Bruckner.

Bach composed two versions of Magnificat – the canticle of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Luke I: 46-55) – the first, in E-flat Major, written in Leipzig for the 1723 Christmas Vespers. For the second version, Bach lowered the key to D Major and removed four hymn arrangements. Since the work would be programmed with Cantata No. 63, Bach opted for brevity in the Magnificat, setting twelve movements, some of whose terseness rather shake us in their compacted drama. The first two arias, sung by different sopranos (Friedl Riegler and Irmgaard Seefried), depict the young Mary. The bass aria (Otto Edelmann) leads to a ravishing appearance (in Et misericordia) of Ferrier (with tenor Hugo Meyer-Welfing) accompanied by muted strings and flutes. The ensuing chorus Fecit potentiam surges in feverish energy, a colossal pageant in a small space. The fiery tenor aria Deposuit potentes features Hugo Meyer-Welfing. Kathleen Ferrier returns for the lovely Esurientes implevit bonis, pairing her voice with two flutes. Ferrier joins Seefried and Riegler for the exalted trio Suscepit Israel, in which the oboes intone softly the Magnificat chant tune. The Sicut locutus est chorus presents a relatively academic four-part fugue, but the concluding Gloria Patri sets the doxology to a visionary pitch.

Portait Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach

Bach may have composed his Cantata No. 11 in 1735 for Ascension Day, the fortieth day of Easter. William Herbert, tenor; William Parsons, bass; and Ena Mitchell, soprano join Kathleen Ferrier for this 1949 – in the 1906 Novello edition – recording, made in English, which conductor Jacques preferred. The cantata relates Christ’s ascension and the various reactions of his Apostles.  In eleven movements, the first six would have been performed prior to the sermon, the last five following its conclusion. The text combines Gospels from Mark, Luke, and Acts, with added words for the closing chorales from 17th Century writers Johann Rist and Gottfried Wilhelm Sacer. Ferrier appears in piercing voice in the expansive “Ah, tarry yet awhile” whose melos well resembles the Agnus Dei from the Mass in B minor. Christ ascends to Heaven, and the Chorus sings a noble “Now at Thy feet” in measured tones. Ferrier appears only once more, to intone the recitative, “Ah Lord, now quickly come again,” so as to invite Ena Mitchell’s sweet aria, “Jesu, all Thy loving kindness.” The pomp and ceremony of exaltation concludes with the Chorus’ “When will then night be over?”

Bach composed Cantata No. 67 prior to his Leipzig residence in 1723, the seven-part work set to texts from Timothy II and selected writers. The resurrection of Christ – announced by tenor William Herbert – shall dismiss all fear and doubt. Nikolaus Herman’s central chorale celebrates – in the Lutheran vision – the joy of the Easter message. Ferrier appears in the troubled alto recitative, “Lord Jesus, thou the sting of death has drawn. . .” which projects yet still doubt, but the bass (William Parsons) aria of Jesus’ return with Chorus, “Peace be unto you,” dispels the last anxieties. The final chorale, “Lord Christ, thou art the Prince,” comes from a text by Jakob Ebert.  To be performed on the first Sunday after Easter, the very opening orchestral and choral tissue rises in grand, solemn ecstasy. Dr. Jacques leads the 1930 Novello edition, with a few slight modifications in the soli.  Herbert’s “Oh Lord, in pity here” in his opening aria well conveys both the emotional and spiritual import of the occasion.

The disc concludes with the famous “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring” from Cantata 147 in the setting for solo Chorus. Bach had been installed as Thomascantor in Leipzig in 1723, and this cantata represents his first cycle for the city. It marks the Feast of the Visitation which, ten years later, would invite the composition of the Magnificat. The 8 October 1949 recording, restored by Adrian Tuddenham and Norman White, carries us into a realm of rapt devotion.

–Gary Lemco

 

 

 

 

Jim Snidero – Waves of Calm – Savant 

Jim Snidero – Waves of Calm – Savant 

Jim Snidero – Waves of Calm – Savant SCD 2176 – 49:40 – ****:

(Jim Snidero – alto sax; Jeremy Pelt – trumpet; Nat Reeves – bass; Jonathan Barber – drums)

As we reach middle age, we all face the reality that our parents are approaching the time that they will become seriously ill, and often times pass away, before we are emotionally ready to deal with their deaths. Jazz musicians are increasingly dealing with this issue by expressing themselves in a musical form, to honor either their memory, or better yet while they are still alive, and facing serious health issues.

Alto saxophonist, Jim Snidero, who has been active on the scene for forty years, offers his heartfelt emotions regarding his father’s Parkinson’s Disease struggles, on his new CD for Savant Records, Waves of Calm. His quintet features noted trumpeter, Jeremy Pelt; pianist Orrin Evans (who now is a member of The Bad Plus, after the exit of Ethan Iverson); bassist, Nat Reeves; and drummer, Jonathan Barber.

The eight tracks consist of the title track, four ballads, and three originals. Keeping in mind his father, the ballads are soothing, relaxed, but not saccharine. Snidero takes his time, making effective use of space, letting his sensuous tone linger and sink in. The “less is more” sound space is effective, and does honor to his vision for this recording. The ballads are done in a trio setting, and Orrin Evans contributes in setting a reflective mood.

The numbers with Pelt are of higher energy, and help explore the darker side of this debilitating disease. When Evans contributes on the Rhodes, it opens up the tunes to a percolating fusion motif. There is some overdubbing with piano and Rhodes meeting, that really opens up new dimensions. “Truth” is a clear example with the alto/trumpet blending, and Nat Reeves’ bass providing the heartbeat. The acoustics, both here, and throughout the recording, are crisp and vibrant.

The liner notes indicate that “Dad Song” has a CTI influence from the 1970s, made popular by Freddie Hubbard, and you can clearly hear the polish and sheen that made CTI so popular back in the day.

“Visions” is perhaps the most aggressive track, and features drummer, Jonathan Barber, firing on all cylinders pushing the tune into darker territory. Evans enters and adds immediate spice. Jazz fusion fans will dig the closer, “Estuary” that will channel a Miles Davis like workout during the period with Chick Corea or Joe Zawinul.

I’ve been a fan of Jim Snidero since his early Criss Cross recordings. He has had a long career both as a musician, and as an educator with Indiana University and Princeton. His recent CD tribute to Cannonball Adderley (along with Pelt) was well received.

This new issue is an excellent mix of motifs and reflects well on his noted career, and is a heartfelt tribute to his father. Highly recommended…

Tracklist:
Waves of Calm
Truth
Old Folks
Visions
I Fall in Love Too Easily
Dad Song
If I Had You
Estuary

—Jeff Krow

 

 

The Music Treasury for 26 May 2019 — Franco Gulli, Violinist, Part 2

The Music Treasury for 26 May 2019 — Franco Gulli, Violinist, Part 2

The Music Treasury continues its tribute to violinist Franco Gulli this week.  Hosted by Dr Gary Lemco, the Spring broadcast time of The Music Treasury on KZSU 90.1 FM remains Sunday, from 19:00 to 21:00 PDT.  You can also listen online at kzsulive.stanford.edu during the broadcast time.

Franco Gulli, Violinist, Part II

Franco Gulli (1926-2001) was considered one of the world’s finest violinists. He traveled extensively as a guest soloist, touring Europe, the former Soviet Union, North and South America, Africa, and Japan and gave performances all over United States, including Carnegie Hall, Kennedy Center, Library of Congress, and Metropolitan Museum of Art. He was a jury member of major violin competitions worldwide and held positions at international festivals in Vienna, Paris, Dubrovnik, Lucerne, Venice, and Sienna.

Born in Trieste, Italy, in 1926, he launched his career as concertmaster of the Milan Chamber Orchestra and soloist of the renowned ensemble I Virtuosi di Roma. Subsequently, he had numerous engagements performing with principal orchestras under the baton of great masters such as Sir Yehudi Menuhin and Maestro Rostropovich. Equally a fan of  intimate chamber music, Gulli performed the sonata repertory with his wife Enrica Cavallo, a distinguished pianist.  Gulli’s discography is long and covers many centuries of music ranging from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, the complete violin concerti of Mozart, to Strauss and Respighi.

He met Enrica Cavallo shortly after the war, and the pair formed the Gulli-Cavallo Duo in 1947. They married in 1950, and performed together for the next fifty years. In tandem with the duo, Gulli gave masterclasses and served on juries. He was a member of the Accademia di Santa Cecilia, Rome, the Accademia Cherubini, Florence, and the Reale Accademia Filarmonica of Bologna. In1966 he and his wife were awarded the Prize of the Critic for their recording of Mendelssohn’s Concerto for Piano, Violin and Strings and his Sonata in F Majo

Perhaps his most well known recording was his 1959 premiere of the then newly-discovered Paganini Concerto No. 5, a best seller ever since.  In addition to his career on stage, Franco Gulli has touched the lives of many musicians through his love of teaching. He gave master classes at home and abroad in Switzerland, France, and England. In 1972, he was appointed Professor of Music at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, and held this position for nearly 30 years, imparting his love of music to students, faculty, and the community.

The Music Treasury celebrates the new Rhine Classics release of 11 CDs that capture Franco Gulli in concert.  Host Gary Lemco shares memories of having met and interviewed Gulli in Atlanta, GA, after the Maestro had performed Bloch’s Baal Shem with the Atlanta Symphony under Louis Lane.

This is the second part of a tribute to Gulli, who had played Bloch’s Baal Shem with the Atlanta Symphony under Louis Lane. His recorded work for the Musical Heritage label has yet to be restored in its entirety.  Gulli admired both Nathan Milstein and Joseph Szigeti, and Gulli imitated and surpassed what had been great in both artists: scholarship, fidelity to the musical test, precision, and a degree of personal interpretation that maintained his spontaneity.

Program List:
Bloch: Suite No. 1 for Solo Violin
Rorem: Day Music: Nos 1-2
Bartok: Violin Concerto No. 2 (1938)
Respighi: Violin Sonata in B Minor
Ghedini: Contrappunti for String Trio and Orchestra (w/Giuranna, Caramia)

 

 

Tierney Sutton Band – Screen Play – BFM 

Tierney Sutton Band – Screen Play – BFM 

Tierney Sutton Band – Screen Play – BFM Jazz 68:22****

The Tierney Sutton Band was founded on a collegial construct based on Baha’i principles, which has been the ethos of the group since its inception over twenty-five years ago. It should then come as no surprise, that the singer has received 8 Grammy nominations for every session she and the band have recorded during the last decade. The latest entry in this progression of successes is Screen Play, which is focussed on the first Century associated with American film music.

Most of the compositions are readily identifiable and quite possibly easily associated by the listeners with the films for which they were made or in which they were played as incidental music. This adventure begins with “The Windmills Of Your Mind” written by Alan & Marilyn Bergman along with composer Michel Legrand for the wonderful Norman Jewison 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair. Tierney’s sly interpretation is filled with glossy contours which readily captures the restless of the number.

The Bergmans were prolific composers as three other of their compositions are included in this session including “What Are You Doing The Rest Of You Life”, “It Might Be You” and a previously unrecorded “Ev’ry Now And Then”. While the first number may be the better known, Sutton is more effective and affecting on the other two compositions as both are unabashedly romantic. In fact the third number had not previously been recorded. It is performed as a duet with pianist Christian Jacob making for a stylishly uncluttered interpretation.

The musical Grease written by Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey originally came to Broadway in 1972 and was adapted as a feature film in 1978. Two numbers from the movie were “Hopelessly Devoted To You” and “You’re The One That I Want” both of which receive unique treatments from Sutton. The former is offered as a moving ballad with Sutton impressively emotional and backed with thoughtful pianistic exposition from Christian Jacob. The latter tune is a Latin tinged 5/4 prance that is propulsive, smart and energetic.

We close with a couple of iconic songs from movies in the 1960s. Firstly the 1961 Blake Edwards comedy Breakfast at Tiffany’s that featured the Henry Mancini/Johnny Mercer hit “Moon River”. Sutton is both thoughtful and lyrical as she runs through the lyrics. The other number is Paul Simon’s “The Sound Of Silence” which was integral to Mike Nichols 1967 groundbreaking movie The Graduate. The arrangement here is by bassist Trey Henry and drummer Ray Brinker which is a compelling backdrop for Tierney Sutton’s adventurous vocal interpretation of the tune.

This is another in an enviable string of shape-shifting releases by The Tierney Sutton Band.

Musicians:
Tierney Sutton – vocals; Christian Jacob – piano; Kevin Axt – bass;  Trey Henry – bass; Ray Brinker – drums; Serge Merlaud – guitar #5,12,13; Alan Bergman – vocals #12

TrackList: The Windmills Of Your Mind; Moon River/Calling You; On A Clear Day (You Can See Forever); What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life; I’ve Got No Strings; If I Only Had A Brain; The Sound Of Silence; Goodbye For Now; Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend; Hopelessly Devoted To You; You’re The One That I Want; How Do You Keep The Music Playing ?. Ev’ry Now And Then; It Might Be You; Arrow

—Pierre Giroux

 

 

“Les Maitres du Motet” – Les Arts Florissants/ Paul Agnew – Harmonia mundi 

“Les Maitres du Motet” – Les Arts Florissants/ Paul Agnew – Harmonia mundi 

“Les Maitres du Motet” = SEBASTIEN DE BROSSARD: Miserere mei Deus; Stabat Mater; Ave verum corpus; PIERRE BOUTEILLER: Missa pro Defunctis; ANDRE RAISON: Kyrie de la Messe du Premier Ton; Kyrie de la Messe du Deuxieme Ton – Les Arts Florissants/ Paul Agnew – Harmonia mundi HAF 8905300, 67:05 ****:

Formidable and famously reliable forces take on some not-so-well-known composers in this excellently recorded disc. Agnew, inheriting William Christie’s baby, lets us down not one whit in this superbly sung recital. Brossard (1655-1730) was the son of a poor glassmaker from Lower Normandy who became a priest and studied hard to improve his fledgling lute skills, ended up in Notre Dame (alas, concerning recent events) as the assistant to the Chapel Master. Since 1589 the Protestants had co-opted the cathedral, but it was returned to the Catholics in 1681 and Broussard is appointed first vicar, then Chapel Master, surely one of the most coveted positions in Europe.

He wrote, collected, and published, making one of the greatest musical collections ever assembled, which he leaves to the royal library, himself dying in poverty due to a small pension that he must wait for, even though a suitable amount of fame becomes him. Leaving behind many motets, liturgical compositions, “serious airs”, and even drinking songs, Broussard departs the world impoverished monetarily, but rich in accomplishments, amply proven by these magnificent three pieces recorded here, so close to the contrapuntal wizardry of Charpentier as to be scary.

Bouteiller (c. 1655 – c. 1717) leaves us scant evidence of his life’s story. In 1687 he led the choir at Troyes, only to be dismissed for truancy, brought back later, and dismissed again. He wrote a lot, and everyone seemed to like it, but no one seems to know where it all went. He did meet up with Brossard at one point, and even offered him rights to publish 13 “excellent masses” and the Requiem recorded here. His writing is in the “French style”, meaning five voices, and an amazing sense of textural coloring and contrapuntal mastery. But he remained a wanderer, even singing minor roles with various choruses late in life. Another musical mystery, one to be grappled with and grateful for.

Again, Agnew and LAF are terrific in a disc that will give much pleasure.

—Steven Ritter

 

 

 

French Cello Concertos —Hee-Young Lim, cello/ London Symphony Orchestra/ Scott Yoo – Sony 

French Cello Concertos —Hee-Young Lim, cello/ London Symphony Orchestra/ Scott Yoo – Sony 

French Cello Concertos = SAINT-SAENS: Cello Concerto No. 1 in A minor, Op. 33; LALO: Cello Concerto in D minor; MILHAUD: Cello Concerto No. 1, Op. 136; OFFENBACH: Les armes de Jacqueline; MASSENET: Meditation from Thais – Hee-Young Lim, cello/ London Symphony Orchestra/ Scott Yoo – Sony 803581 184259, 75:34 (12/14/18)**** :

Hee-Young Lim was the principal solo cellist of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra when she was selected to become the first cello professor at the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing last September. For her debit album Lim chose French masterpieces she had studied with Philippe Muller. The opening work, the 1873 Concerto No. 1 of Saint-Saens, explodes forth wildly with a passionate immediacy in brisk triplets that has always appealed to its great exponents, Piatagorsky, Starker, Fournier, Gendron, and Rostropovich. Lim, too, brings a fiery zeal to her performance (rec. 2-4 July 2018), imbuing in the one-movement concerto a sense of dramatic, cyclical economy.  In the broad, lyrical second theme, Lim allows her instrument a voluminous singing line. The Allegretto – a light minuet – offers a transparency that we might find in Couperin or Lully for an “antique” beauty. The accompanying wind colors provided by the LSO contribute equally to the elegant finesse of the occasion. The third, virtuosic movement combines melodic fluency with an air of melancholy. The opening tactics achieve a new luster with a gorgeous theme – indulging the low registers of the cello and its high flute tone – that will allow Lim to express her reverence for the French master, then she will move with due haste and precision to the glorious coda that transforms the minor tonality to a sumptuous major conclusion.

Lalo composed his 1877 Cello Concerto for Belgian cellist Adolphe Fischer.  A dark athleticism suffuses the work, which, typical of much Lalo, resonates with Spanish and Iberian impulses, likely the result of the composer’s association with Sarasate.  The Prelude: Lento projects a fierce sense of declamation, filtered by a passionate urgency. The ensuing Allegro maestoso alternates a lyrical effusiveness with cadenza-like passages that once more lead into the throes of the opening motif and its strident punctuations. The aerial character of the accompanying flutes infuses a lighter texture into an on mnanner of Schumann, offering a reverie that vacillates between G minor and its tonic major. The quicker part of the movement, Allegro – Presto, introduces a motif we might recognize from Sarasate’s Spanish Dances. With the accompaniment from the woodwind, strings, and tympani, the music’s kinship with Lalo’s own Symphonie espagnole announces itself clearly. The last movement, Introduction: Andante asserts the Spanish Dances relation blatantly, here fused with a fierce habanera rhythm that equally nods to Bizet. The Allegro vivo proceeds as a rondo, jaunty and lusty in its declamations. The main melody insists upon a “sliding” gesture sure to captivate anyone who enjoys the cello’s capacity for hearty expressivity.

Darius Milhaud wrote his Cello Concerto No. 1 in 1934, and for much of its recording history it “belonged to” Janos Starker, who relished its idiosyncratic classicism merged with jazz elements.  The first movement, Nonchalant, poses an air we find in Poulenc, of the sophisticate, the boulevardier. A sense of lazy self-satisfaction suffuses this leisurely stroll among Parisian memories. The cello has a deeply resonant cadenza that Lim provides some juice.  Muted brass and an atmosphere of gloomy self-searching marks the Grave second movement. The melody becomes impassioned, especially as heavy treads in the bass and an aerial flute complement the texture. The cello line moves into a brief, accompanied cadenza, wistful and nostalgic. The winds and muted brass pick up the thread, with the strings, to bring the pained lyric to a close. The last movement Milhaud marks Joyeux, a vivid romp in characteristically carnival colors. Whether the effects emanate from Jazz or Brazilian folk elements, the music moves with pompous, brassy assurance, ably balanced between Lim and conductor Yoo and the crackerjack LSO.

One of composer Jacques Offenbach’s daughters was named Jacqueline: whether Les armes de Jacqueline has anything to do with her “tears” must remain a riddle. The arioso floats over wave-like figures in the strings to produce a luxurious seven-minute song without words. The tempo speeds up momentarily, only to return to the romantic mist that envelops the sweet work as a whole. The ubiquitous Meditation from Thais by Massenet has enthralled listeners to recordings as far back as the days of Mischa Elman.  Even William Holden sailed on this vehicle in the 1940 classic film Golden Boy. Harp and Lim’s ardent cello carry us into an enchanted land where redemption really is possible.

—Gary Lemco

 

 

 

Paul AUSTERLITZ: Water Prayers for Bass Clarinet – Round Whirled Records

Paul AUSTERLITZ: Water Prayers for Bass Clarinet – Round Whirled Records

Paul AUSTERLITZ: Water Prayers for Bass Clarinet – Round Whirled Records 0083, 60: 20, [9/18] ****½ :

(Paul Austerlitz; bass clarinet, contrabass clarinet, tenor saxophone, Benito Gonzalez; piano, Santo Debriano; bass, Royal Hartigan; drums, Isaiah Richardson; clarinet, Rozna Zila; vocals)

Professor Paul Austerlitz has released a first-rate document of his musical and pedagogical work at Gettysburg College. On the cover the 61 year old veteran of jazz studies is serenely standing knee deep in the ocean, his magnificent contrabass clarinet dips into the surf as if taking a drink. In the notes he expresses the watery inspirations behind his musical investigations. “ I traverse waters with my bass clarinet..an oceanic spirit animates my muse. I hope you can feel it. Music is an oral tradition into which we all dip, and I am fortunate to have been surrounded by many transcendent influences.” 

As an ethnomusicologist, Austerlitz studies the folk/oral traditions of Haiti and Dominican Republic which are described under the poorly understood term vodou. Here, ceremonial songs, verse, spell and chant are set to a performance framework recognizably jazz, but including meringue riffs and afro-creole singing by Rozna Zila. The first track combines spiritual invocation of African deities reinforced by a potent and low-rumbling bass clarinet solo. An auspicious start to what will be a recording of many surprises.

There follows a processional which takes things down a register with the mighty contrabass clarinet playing overlapping figures which support a electronic bass clarinet which wails and snarls like a Hendrix guitar (which is in fact the inspiration.)

These more experimental pieces give way to a couple of tunes which overtly refer to the musical legacy of John Coltrane. These are perhaps the most accomplished and compelling tracks by the ensemble. In fact, pianist Benito Gonzalez manages a credible  facsimile of the pianism of McCoy Tyner while Santi DeBriano and Royal Hartigan achieve that incomparable floating swing of the Coltrane Quartet  circa 1961. The leaders deep instrument is fantastically moving expressive, while a clarinet chorus flares up in places to heat things up to the boiling point.

En-art, another Coltrane tribute, is a contrafact of Giant Steps, that is to say, a new melody laid over the famous and devilishly difficult chord changes. The tune itself is referenced a number of times. It is clear that the leader has mulled over the Coltrane legacy and arrived a recapturing the spirit of this giant musician in a way both artistically pedagogically satisfying.

Oriki is a Yoruba song of praise to kings and illustrious ancestors. It is a long form, with a simple oddly shaped and beat-shifted melody. Debriano shines on a long muscular bass solo.. The same is reprised on the last track where it is coaxed into the spell-binding Coltrane groove matrix ina stripped down quartet form. The clarinet choir stirs up a big reedy roar on Bara Su Wa Ya. Vodou spirits are duly summoned and  one assumes they would be on the way, especially if they love the combination of ensemble precision and funky multi-voiced arrangements that barely contain a carnival raucousness

Portrait Paul Austerlitz w Clarinet

Paul Austerlitz, w Bass Clarinet

The contrabass clarinet is a rare but spectacular instrument. Its range can dip deeper than even the bass saxophone. Austerlitz uses it to good effect on the somber Prayer to a Primal Wind which features the vocal of Rozna Zila on a vodou invocation which, according to the professor’s notes, is an attempt to harness the primal energies to foster equilibrium and all levels of our being.

Funkay-Be-Sea brings back the bass clarinet on a straightforward riff driven piece propelled by snappy drumming anda ‘60s style Rhodes piano. Royal Hartigan enjoys his finest moment on a dynamically nuanced and melodic solo.

There is not a weak track on this fine record. My favorite tune though shows just how far this session ranges. Finnish Waltz, a traditional tune and a superb arrangement, salutes the musicians mothers heritage from that country antipodal to Haiti in every way.  It is not surprising that an ethnomusicologist would collect good tunes from all parts of the world. It It represents a considered approach to incorporating a most exotic musical culture into a jazz framework and showcases a remarkable clarinet concept played with consummate authority. This is one of the most innovative and satisfying jazz records of 2019. Highly recommended.

—Fritz Balwit

More Information through Round Whirled Records:

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Vijay Iyer, Craig Taborn – The Transitory Poems – ECM 

Vijay Iyer, Craig Taborn – The Transitory Poems – ECM 

Vijay Iyer, Craig Taborn – The Transitory Poems – [TrackList follows] – ECM 2644, 74:11 [3/15/19] ****:

Constructive collaboration is the crux of jazz. That’s the heart and soul of Vijay Iyer and Craig Taborn’s twin-piano outing, the 74-minute, eight-track live performance, The Transitory Poems. The two keyboardists initially met as members of saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell’s band, Note Factory; and contributed to Mitchell’s 2002 album, Song for My Sister (Pi Recordings). In the context of Mitchell’s work ethic, the two pianists learned about pursuing music without boundaries and the importance of shaping material in real time, without rehearsal or pre-conceived ideas. That philosophy grounds Taborn and Iyer’s subsequent solo careers (Taborn has 11 releases as leader or co-leader; Iyer has over 20 as leader or co-leader). All this shared and unshared history permeates The Transitory Poems, which was recorded live March 2018 at the concert hall of the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest.

The Transitory Poems consists of in-the-moment pieces, some of which act as tributes to influences such as pianists Cecil Taylor, Muhal Richard Abrams and Geri Allen, as well as painter and sculptor Jack Whitten. The album title comes from an interview quote from Taylor. Abrams, Allen, Whitten and Taylor passed away during the year or so leading up to the Budapest concert, thus the four were in Taborn and Iyer thought’s or lying in their subconscious minds. Listening back to the recording, the two players heard the music as “a series of homages” to the great artists who had inspired them.

The pianists start the set with the longest piece, “Life Line (Seven Tensions).” This is an intricate application of free-flowing creativity which illustrates how Iyer and Taborn can extemporaneously compose as they play. Over the course of 13 minutes, they fluctuate from dimly-lit tints to lighter hues while transitioning from single lines to counterpointed chord changes, hinting at or touching jazz, pre-jazz and neo-classical music. The shortest cut is “Sensorium,” dedicated to Whitten, who was sometimes stimulated by jazz and stated he wanted to transform John Coltrane’s sheets of sound into sheets of light. During the four-minute “Sensorium” Taborn and Iyer craft tiered music which flits with the kind of abstract motifs which saturated Whitten’s work, which had a sense of immediacy and juxtaposition in the creative process. The 11-minute “Clear Monolith” is for pianist Muhal Richard Abrams, who co-founded the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (or AACM). “Clear Monolith” doesn’t try to echo Abrams but there is a perception of Abram’s intellectual curiosity and fortitude. “Clear Monolith” begins with a minimalist section using both piano’s bottom and upper keyboard areas, which provides an interesting tonal contrast. Gradually, Taborn and Iyer escalate the emotional eminence with vibrant and progressively assertive improvisations, which are balanced by the duo’s use of open space and single-note directness.

Iyer and Taborn conclude with music which reflects their esteem for Taylor and Allen. Taylor is the dedicatee for the evolving, darkly-shaded “Luminous Brew,” which has a measured and smartly portentous stance different than Taylor’s music, although over the course of eight minutes Iyer and Taborn layer in some rhythmic moments akin to Taylor’s style. Taborn and Iyer end with the three-part, 13-minute medley, “Meshwork/Libation/When Kabuya Dances,” a multi-stratum construction which is potent and animated, with musical instances which showcase the duo’s knotty interaction. The medley’s unconventional oscillations almost abruptly dissolve as Iyer and Taborn interlock with a sublime interpretation of Allen’s glistening and sensitive “When Kabuya Dances,” which can be found on Allen’s 1985 LP, The Printmakers, Allen’s debut solo record. Allen’s version was rollicking and roiling, whereas Taborn and Iyer’s adaptation is more reserved. The Transitory Poems is an album which unfolds. It can be challenging in some ways but is never overtly taxing or difficult to enjoy. Listening to Taborn and Iyer move through one tune to another is a transcendent experience. The precise and crystalline engineering and mixing add to the listener’s involvement, a hallmark of ECM’s aesthetic.

Musicians:
Vijay Iyer – piano; Craig Taborn – piano

TrackList:
Life Line (Seven Tensions)
Sensorium
Kairòs
S.H.A.R.D.S.
Shake Down
Clear Monolith
Luminous Brew
Meshwork/Libation/When Kabuya Dances

—Doug Simpson

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MIASKOVSKY: Cello Sonatas, with sonatas by PROKOFIEV; TANEYEV – Gavel Gomziakov, cello/ Andrei Korobenikov, piano – Onyx Classics 

MIASKOVSKY: Cello Sonatas, with sonatas by PROKOFIEV; TANEYEV – Gavel Gomziakov, cello/ Andrei Korobenikov, piano – Onyx Classics 

MIASKOVSKY: Cello Sonata No. 1 in D Major, Op. 12; Cello Sonata No. 2 in A minor, Op. 81; PROKOFIEV: Ballade for Cello and Piano in C minor, Op. 15; TANEYEV: Canzona for Cello and Piano – Gavel Gomziakov, cello/ Andrei Korobenikov, piano – Onyx Classics ONYX 4176, 61:02 (4/20/19) [Distr. Harmonia mundi/PIAS] *****:

Nikolai Miaskovsky (1881-1950) benefitted from instruction from various Russian instructors—Rimsky-Korsakov, Liadov, Gliere, and Scriabin—influences that did not overwhelm his natural lyricism and basic conservatism.  In 1948, Soviet authorities accused him, Shostakovich, Khachaturian, and Prokofiev of “formalism,” of favoring musical styles antithetical to the spirit of the people.  The two cello sonatas by Miaskovsky derive from opposites ends of his creative life, the First Sonata in D (1911; rev. 1935) echoes with the Romantic ethos we know from the Rachmaninov Sonata in terms of lyricism and athletic virtuosity. The music opens, Andante, with the cello’s deep tones (espressivo) in harmony with bell-like octaves in the keyboard.  The 1725 Stradivari Chevillard – Rei de Portugal instrument does much to resonate the beauty of this section, whose second theme quite enthralls us. The writing becomes militant (forte, molto marcato) as the development section once more embraces the romantic main theme. The somber melancholy segues directly into the second movement, Allegro passionato, sporting another potent melody, here in 6/8 against the keyboard arpeggios. The secondary subject falls into F Major stated staccato, espressivo, ma semplice, 6/8 and 9/8.  The tumultuous development becomes thick in texture, leading to the recapitulation that places the second subject as a casual cantabile in B-flat Major.  With a potent climaThe x, triple forte, the music restates the sentiment of the opening Adagio, ending pianissimo. As a vehicle for Gomziakov’s instrument, the sonata serves brilliantly, even luxuriously, so its omission from standard cello recitals seems inexplicable.

The Cello Sonata No. 2 (1948) is one of Miaskovsky’s last works, written after the notorious denunciation of him, when he suffered ill health as well. A three movement work, its first two movements are predominantly lyrical while the third is much more athletic and virtuosic, fit for the work’s dedicatee Rostropovich. One scholar sees the first movement, Allegro moderato, as embodying a “romance archetype,” whole others see the movement as understated and essentially personal and withdrawn. The opening melody, notwithstanding, has a “million dollar sonority,” whatever its intent.  In sonata-form, the arioso attraction of the harmonious collaboration of cello and piano spins out without turmoil, until, perhaps, the F-sharp minor appearance of the second subject in the muted cello during the recapitulation. Pianist Korobeinikov adds some beguiling passagework to the mix, well convincing us of his – and Miaskovsky’s – capacities for ardent expression.

The second movement, marked Andante cantabile – perhaps in homage to Tchaikovsky – sits in F Major in rocking accompaniment, but it quickly adds a sterner, declamatory element into the mix. The lyric song becomes elastic and elongated, with no loss of inspiration.  The intensity continues only to retreat slowly into reverie, the cello and the piano arpeggios only more to utter a last, passionate gasp before fading away. The last movement, Allegro con spirito, proffers a rondo-finale set in brisk 16ths, with a highly contrasting secondary tune. The arched melody that ensues has a bit of oriental languor. Designed for Rostropovich, the writing assumes a clearly virtuosic demeanor, allowing the instrument’s middle and high registers full voice.  The last pages become bolder, more manic, with no loss of lyrical fluency. The keyboard runs and cascades prove just nimble and effortlessly fleet. The last cadence combines a diminuendo and a sudden fortissimo.

The turbulent Ballade in C minor, Op. 15 (1912) of Serge Prokofiev had been a tribute to cellist Nikolai Ruzsky, a wealthy businessman and amateur chamber music enthusiast. On first audition of the work, Miaskovsky commented that the piece would be ideal for Pablo Casals.  Huge, broad gestures have a counter impulse in the middle section, incisive, biting, and realized pizzicato that evolves into a gripping, declamatory statement. The music suddenly breaks off into an Andante, senza espressione, dreamy, and featuring the muted cello. The angular keyboard part introduces harmonies reminiscent of the D Major Piano Concerto, Op. 10. The muddy, thick texture of the closing pages grands down to a halt, gloomy, unearthly, and disturbing.  Prokofiev and cellist Evsei Belousov gave the debit of this weirdly compelling piece in Moscow, January 1914.

Sergei Taneyev (1865-1915) composed his Canzona in F minor in 1883, originally for clarinet and strings.  A pure lyric, its six-minute ternary song passes us in graceful gestures, without bombast, without guile.  As an encore vehicle for our two principals, it provides an elegant finale to “sleeper” disc that must not pass us by unnoticed.  Jean-Martial Golaz receives credit for the mesmerizing sonics.

—Gary Lemco

 

 

 


The Music Treasury for 26 May 2019 — Franco Gulli, Violinist, Part 2

The Music Treasury for 19 May 2019 — Violinist Franco Gulli, Part 1

The Music Treasury, airing this week from 19 :00 to 21:00 PDT, is featuring the exceptional violinist from last century, Franco Gulli.  The show may be heard on KZSU in the Bay Area, and on line at kzsu.stanford.edu, hosted by Dr Gary Lemco.

The show will feature a broad range of Baroque, Classical, Romantic, and Contemporary pieces, including concerti, chamber music, and solo violin (Bach’s D-minor Chaconne).

Franco Gulli, Violinist, Part I

Franco Gulli (1926-2001) was considered one of the world’s finest violinists. He traveled extensively as a guest soloist, touring Europe, the former Soviet Union, North and South America, Africa, and Japan and gave performances all over United States, including Carnegie Hall, Kennedy Center, Library of Congress, and Metropolitan Museum of Art. He was a jury member of major violin competitions worldwide and held positions at international festivals in Vienna, Paris, Dubrovnik, Lucerne, Venice, and Sienna.

Born in Trieste, Italy, in 1926, he launched his career as concertmaster of the Milan Chamber Orchestra and soloist of the renowned ensemble I Virtuosi di Roma. Subsequently, he had numerous engagements performing with principal orchestras under the baton of great masters such as Sir Yehudi Menuhin and Maestro Rostropovich. Equally a fan of  intimate chamber music, Gulli performed the sonata repertory with his wife Enrica Cavallo, a distinguished pianist.  Gulli’s discography is long and covers many centuries of music ranging from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, the complete violin concerti of Mozart, to Strauss and Respighi. In1966 he and his wife were awarded the Prize of the Critic for their recording of Mendelssohn’s Concerto for Piano, Violin and Strings and his Sonata in F Major.

Perhaps his most well known recording was his 1959 premiere of the then newly-discovered Paganini Concerto No. 5, a best seller ever since.  In addition to his career on stage, Franco Gulli has touched the lives of many musicians through his love of teaching. He gave master classes at home and abroad in Switzerland, France, and England. In 1972, he was appointed Professor of Music at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, and held this position for nearly 30 years, imparting his love of music to students, faculty, and the community.

The Music Treasury celebrates the new Rhine Classics release of 11 CDs that capture Franco Gulli in concert.  Host Gary Lemco shares memories of having met and interviewed Gulli in Atlanta, GA, after the Maestro had performed Bloch’s Baal Shem with the Atlanta Symphony under Louis Lane.

Program List:
Mozart: Sonata No. 18 in G Major, K. 301 (w/E. Cavallo)
Bloch: Baal Shem – Three Pictures of Hassidic Life
Vieuxtemps: Romance in C Minor, Op. 7, No. 2 “Desespoir”
Paganini: Violin Concerto No. 5 in A Minor (w/Rossi)
Bach: Chaconne from Violin Partita No. 2 in D Minor, BWV 1004
Schubert: Grand Duo in A Major, D. 562: Andantino and Scherzo
Schoeck: Violin Concerto in B-flat Major, Op. 21 “Quasi una fantasia” (w/Aesbacher)

Mike Allen – Just Like Magic – Cellar Music

Mike Allen – Just Like Magic – Cellar Music

Mike Allen – Just Like Magic – Cellar Music CM010519 68:30****

( Mike Allen – tenor saxophone; Peter Washington – bass; Lewis Nash – drums)

If you happen to have a chance to see the wonderful film documentary Blue Note Records: Beyond The Notes do so. It tells the story of two German-Jewish immigrants Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff who came to the US before the start of World War II and founded the iconic jazz label Blue Note Records. It also outlines the importance of sound engineer Rudy Van Gelder who recorded many of the most significant early sides at his family’s living room  in Hackensack New Jersey, ubiquitously known as the Van Gelder Studio.

Flash forward to the present time period, where Canadian tenor saxophonist Mike Allen accompanied by bassist Peter Washington and drummer Lewis Nash under the watchful ears of Executive Producer and Cellar Music label owner Cory Weeds, would be recording this release Just Like Magic in Englewood Cliffs New Jersey, at the modern version of the Van Gelder Studio. Therein lies the musical tale.

The agreed compositions for this session are a combination of Mike Allen originals along with several notable jazz and American songbook numbers that would work well in the context of this tenor saxophone lead trio. Allen has a rather understated style coupled with a fluid tone. Although he would be supported by a bassist and drummer both of whom are masters of their craft, Allen would have to carry the melodic workload and any clunkers would be his to own. However no such misfortune occurred.

The opening track is an Allen original “Big Bertha”. The tune has a nice swinging lilt, with Washington and Nash delivering some bright support as Allen comes up with his carefully modulated solo. “A Weaver Of Dreams” written by John Elliott and Victor Young was first recorded by Bing Crosby in 1951, but has been covered by many popular singers and jazz musicians since then . It has a lovely ballad melody that plays into Allen’s ability to coax numerable textured lines as he develops his interpretation of the number.

In 1926, George and Ira Gershwin introduced “Someone To Watch Over Me” for the Broadway musical “Oh, Kay!”. Allen uses an elegant ballad approach to the composition filling it with warmth and a quiet eloquence. Washington takes a showy turn on his bass that is grounded in the earthy flow of the tune.

In 1962, John Coltrane and his quartet recorded his composition “Miles’Mode” for his album Coltrane at the Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs NJ. So it seems to be quite appropriate that Mike Allen is now recording his version of the number at the same location. Throughout the number, Allen conveys his own sense of originality for the composition. He plays with confidence as he constructs phrases and improvised lines.

Mike Allen covers Duke Ellington’s “Solitude” with a soulful demonstration that shows his reverence for a jazz classic. Bassist Washington and drummer Nash provide impeccable backing that is elegant and effortless.

All in all,  this is a perceptive and spirited outing.

TrackList: Big Bertha; Klondike; A Weaver Of Dreams; Charlotte; Someone To Watch Over Me; The Man; Miles’ Mode; Metamorphosis; Solitude; Same Old Feeling; Jelly Roll

—Pierre Giroux

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ELGAR from America, Vol. 1 = Historic Orchestral Recordings: Enigma Variations, Cello Concerto, Falstaff, w Toscanini, Piatagorsky, Rodzinski, Barbirolli  – Somm Ariadne 

ELGAR from America, Vol. 1 = Historic Orchestral Recordings: Enigma Variations, Cello Concerto, Falstaff, w Toscanini, Piatagorsky, Rodzinski, Barbirolli  – Somm Ariadne 

ELGAR from America, Vol. 1 = Enigma Variations, Op. 36; Cello Concerto in E minor, Op. 85; Falstaff – Symphonic Study in C minor, Op. 68 – Gregor Piatagorsky, cello/ NBC Symphony Orchestra/ Arturo Toscanini/ New York Philharmonic Orchestra/ John Barbirolli (Op. 85)/ Artur Rodzinski (Op. 68) – Somm Ariadne 5005, 78:55 [Distr. by Naxos] ****:

This all-Elgar disc enjoys several unique qualities: first, it offers the only extant, error-free broadcast from Studio 8-H of Arturo Toscanini’s leading the Enigma Variations (5 November 1949), appearing on CD in its debut.  Although five Toscanini recordings exist, various miscues and technical mishaps prevent their being accepted as anything “definitive.”  No less rare, Artur Rodzinski chose Elgar’s Falstaff for his inaugural concert with the New York Philharmonic as Permanent Conductor (10 October 1943), and Elgar remained a composer usually outside the Rodzinski compass. Despite the heavy edits Rodzinski makes in the score, some 290 measures, the performance has a mystique of its own. Lastly, cello virtuoso Gregor Piatagorsky never made a commercial recording of the Elgar Concerto, so his appearance with John Barbirolli at Carnegie Hall (10 November 1940) marks a decidedly potent occasion in the history of the work’s American history, which began, well enough, in Philadelphia, 1922, with Belgian cellist Jean Gerardy under the baton of Leopold Stokowski.

The 1902 Enigma Variations with Toscanini receives a fleet, resonant performance, particularly potent in the famous “Nimrod” Variation.  But the general pacing and instrumental execution remains at a distinctly high level throughout, with the Variation XII (B.G.N.) broadening the tempo and string sound in a lush meditation that too often the acoustic of Studio 8-H distorts.  The eerie transition from Variation XIII (Romanza ***) proceeds rife with potentially explosive drama, with an attacca segue to the militant strokes in the violins, brass. and battery for the Finale (E.D.U.).  Recent scholarship locates the “enigma” in the numerological references to Bach, that is, BACH, and its musical permutations.  Toscanini’s driven impetus focuses on the majesty and warm, virtuosic power of the music as it culminates in a sense of Empire.

Portrait Edward Elgar

Edward Elgar

Gregor Piatagorsky (1903-1976) appears in especially plaintive guise for the Cello Concerto, whose performance has had prior incarnation on CD in 2010 (“The Art of Gregor Piatagorsky,” WHRA-6032). Barbirolli, too, injects a ferocious energy into the orchestral tissue, selling this passionate work to the New York audience hearing it for the first time at a Philharmonic concert. Mengelberg’s invitation to premiere the work in 1924 New York fell to suspected resistance to the composer, so the Dvorak had been substituted. The pregnant pauses here in 1940, in the dialogue between solo and strings in the Lento – Allegro molto section, become increasingly liquid and sheer, breaking off suddenly to transition to the thoughtful Adagio.  The alert quickness of the Allegro of the last movement heralds a pungent, martial Moderato in which Piatagorsky’s singing legato has wide berth for expression. The finesse along the cello’s fingerboard provides an object lesson in itself. The arched militancy of the wind phrases in tandem with Piatagorsky’s melancholy, drooping figures suggests the passing of a way of life, the Robert Graves sentiment, “Goodbye to All That.” The harmonic rhythm slows down, the textures thicken, and the “Victorian” sound utters a touching, deeply-intoned swan-song.

The orchestral suite-in-one-movement Falstaff takes its cue from Shakespeare’s Henry IV, in which the lover-of-life and fertility, Falstaff, represents a phase of Prince Hal’s sentimental education that the Prince must disavow as a mark of maturity and responsible leadership. In six sections, the piece reveals a variety of moods and instrumental colors that test the Philharmonic’s deft level of response.  The work’s own dedicatee, Sir Landon Ronald, disowned the music as incomprehensible.   Elgar once argued that “the whole of human life is its theme.” The Boar’s Head revel demands some pungent counterpoint, graded in dynamics, that Rodzinski’s forces deliver with swift energy in transition.  The Philharmonic bassoon has his work cut out, much in the character of the sleeping, corpulent Falstaff and his buffoonery. As one continuous movement, the music vaguely outlines the progress of a symphonic movement In sonata-form. The solo violin (Michel Piastro?) intones something like Falstaff’s winning charm in the “Dream Interlude.” The key of C minor marks Falstaff’s march, and the battle music in Shallow’s orchard shares much by way of Richard Strauss.  Elgar will copy Strauss (in Don Quixote) by announcing Falstaff’s death in the solo clarinet.  King Henry’s progress has the quality of a grand march, noble and resonant, one step away from the Op. 39 Pomp and Circumstance set. Like both Strauss and his own idol, Beethoven, the grand gestures fall into the “Eroica” key of E-flat Major.  For Falstaff himself, foolish and frail in his dotage, like Don Quixote, there resounds a delicate, hazy sympathy, to which the New York audience responds with a vague sense of recognition.

–Gary Lemco

 

 

 

Revisiting the Magnepan SMGa Vintage Flat Panel Speaker

Revisiting the Magnepan SMGa Vintage Flat Panel Speaker

Flat and Big? Or, is a small open window more Real? Is Thin In? Is Flat’s where it’s at?

Image Guitar Player Image Guitar and Speaker

Revisiting the Magnepan SMGa Vintage Flat Panel Speaker

I recently retrieved my Magnepan SMGa’s from a friend, whom I sold them to about 10 years ago.  He had moved to a smaller house and could not fit them in to his lifestyle.  So, I bought them back from him. I was skeptical about fitting them into my Near-Field Nirvana set up down stairs sound space.  In my previous article, I had identified Bi-Pole and Di-Pole speakers as a not the best choice for the Nirvana set-up.

Well, guess what?  They worked amazingly well!  I always had loved Magnepan speakers and had owned the Tympani IV A’s and the 3.7’s. They flourished like large Rhododendrons in my large sound spaces.  The SMGa’s, which were the precursors to the MMG’s and newly launched LRS’s from Magnepan, are still more than viable today. Now, I have a Bonsai garden of mini-monitor loudspeakers in my Nirvana set up. The SMGa’s are quite more like Azaleas in the Nirvana setup.

Positioning: Tweeters are on the outside of the panels. Speakers are six feet apart measured from the inside edges. Twenty-six inches from the sidewalls and 24 inches from the back wall.  SMGa’s are angled in roughly four inches (30 degrees) to the listening position, which is six feet away from the speakers. I have custom granite stands, 1.5″ high, with slider feet on the bottoms.  I find it really helps to get the speaker off the carpet or hardwood floor.

Magnepan recommends using a good class AB solid-state amplifier to use with their speakers.  For this listening session I used the Rogue Audio Pharaoh integrated amp, which is class D output with a tube front end in the preamp section.  It was a good match.  I will be trying to get the new Parasound Halo class AB integrated amp to review soon, hopefully, along with the new Magnepan LRS speakers.

The magic of Magnepan’s or other good flat panel designs is the absence of any box colorations.  It’s an open sound field, most like listening to a concert outdoors.  I find that Maggie’s work well in the most hostile sound environments. Windows, Glass and brick hard surfaces, it doesn’t matter!  Box speaker’s, which launch the sound forward, need room treatment to tame reflections and positioning for accurate bass levels.  SMGA’s not finicky about bass suck-outs regarding sitting position.

Now, of course, nothing is ever perfect and there are some listening constraints with Magnepan speakers.

Need 100 watts of power or more!

Image Lightning Bolt

Not as dynamic sounding as box speakers

Image Cannon

Large and Take up a lot space in the Room

Image Flowers

Listening through a small Window into a Performance

Now, let’s consider the advantages of listening to a point source mini-monitor.  There are some classic designs that can do the “magic act” of disappearing in the room! Being point sources with small cabinets can minimize wave launch sound diffractions and boomy muddy bass artifacts.  Correctly tuned designs with smart science and ears, allow you to suspend belief of listening to just HiFi and getting you a seat in mid to the back hall of the concert venue. My favorite little gems are the Rogers LS3/5A’s, Harbeth HPL3ESR’s, and ProAc Tab 10’s

Image Speaker Pair

Roger’s LS3/5A’s

Imagine listening through a small window cut out from the back wall of the hall.  The sound is REAL, but the scale is a bit smaller and not actual size.

Image Car Mirror

So, what is better, Flat panels with large-scale presentation and great tonality or small dynamic speakers with a spacious realism and lively sound?  The answer is yes to both. Get both!  There is not one speaker on the planet that will satisfy all your listening Mojo.  You can spend $$$$$ for Wilsons or Magico’s, or spend a tenth of the price or less for two pairs of speakers that will please on all occasions.  I’m basically an Audio Cheapskate.  I believe you can achieve high-end sound performance by choosing wisely and passionately.

Looking Forward

Coming up next reviews on the Magnepan new small high-end LRS speaker, Parasound Halo integrated amp and the ProAc Tab 10 Signature speakers.

Image Pro Tac Amp

Image Guitar and Speaker Image Speaker Near Field

Listening Instruments:

  • Rogue Audio Pharaoh integrated Amp
  • Cambridge Audio CXC CD Transport
  • Naim Audio DAC V1
  • Rega Planar P3 Turntable
  • Sim Moon Audio 110 LP Phono Preamp
  • Rega Planar 3 Turntable with Ortofon MC Quintet Cartridge
  • Chord Company Speaker Cables
  • Monster Cable Sigma Interconnects
  • Nordost Digital Co-Ax Cable
  • Black Ravioli e-Floss Pads

—Ric Mancuso

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Evgeny Kissin and Emerson String Quartet—The New York Concert = Works by MOZART, FAURE; DVORAK; SHOSTAKOVICH – DGG

Evgeny Kissin and Emerson String Quartet—The New York Concert = Works by MOZART, FAURE; DVORAK; SHOSTAKOVICH – DGG

The New York Concert = MOZART: Piano Quartet No. 1 in G minor, K. 478; FAURE: Piano Quartet No. 1 in C minor, Op. 15; DVORAK: Piano Quintet in A Major, Op. 81; SHOSTAKOVICH: Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 57: Scherzo: Allegretto – Evgeny Kissin, piano/ Emerson String Quartet – DGG 453 6574 (2 CDs) 57:43; 41:40 (4/12/19) [Distr. Universal] *****:

Pianist Evgeny Kissin (b. 1971) returns from a two-year sabbatical a refreshed and more thoughtful artist, a phenomenon some of us who admired the young Van Cliburn wished he had experienced.  On 27 April 2018. Kissin and the Emerson String Quartet – Philip Setzer and Eugene Drucker, violins; Lawrence Dutton, viola; Paul Watkins, cello – who had been touring internationally with Kissin, collaborated for a powerful evening of chamber ensemble in New York City’s Carnegie Hall.  The addition of cellist Paul Watkins – replacing David Finckel – centers the Emerson Quartet upon a dark-toned, burnished sound equally committed to sonic luxury.

The program opens with Mozart’s 1785 Piano Quartet in G minor, the first of what Mozart had planned as three such piano quartets for publisher Franz Anton Hoffmeister. The passionate work begins with a unison motif that serves as fateful leitmotif that has its foil in the lyrical theme played by string alone. In sonata form, the piece assumes an intricate Mozart development and dramatic urgency, as has been Mozart’s wont in the key of G minor. The keyboard writing, virtuosic in a concertante style, evinces the brilliance and pointed restraint we recognize from his piano concertos of the period. The articulation of the violin and viola parts become no less compelling in their silken runs and scales.

The lush Andante movement in B-flat Major proceeds in a form that extends the arioso, lyrical element without formally developing the themes. The intricate melodic structure indulges in shifting accents and downbeats so that the sense of measure remains ambiguous. The piano manages transition through semi-cadenza passagework. The first violin, too, carries the melodic tissue forward. The Rondo in G Major displays Mozart’s apparently boundless capacity for captivating melody, moving forward by alternating piano and strings in conversation, with an occasional foray into the minor mode. The rich textures call upon the viola and cello to add a sonorous, plastic interplay that never ceases to enchant by the sheer dint of vocal invention.

The 1876-79 Piano Quartet in C minor of Gabriel Faure came about after the emotional disappointments of a frustrated love affair with Marianne Viardot in which plans of marriage disintegrated. For a relatively early work in Faure’s extensive career as a molder of chamber music, the Quartet demonstrates a rich and fertile sense of his idiosyncratic modal harmony, utilizing a martial, dotted, rhythmic melody that suffuses the first movement, Allegro molto moderato. The piano proceeds in wide, generous arpeggios, the violin and cello indulging in a spacious melody. The development expresses that nervous, chromatic calm that defines the tenebrous world of Faure, an emotional eddy that will rise in scales to a passionate outburst. Typical of the Faure style, the coda of the first movement recedes gently into space. The Scherzo: Allegro vivo reveals a manic urgency we do not often associate with the Faure ethos. Rhythmic shifts abound while the texture of the music literally glitters with driven colors. Nice dialogue ensues between the keyboard and the viola. A lyrical theme spins out for the middle section, with Kissin’s airy, arpeggiated support under the strings’ chordal figures.

The emotional heart of the piece lies in the Adagio, a somber and introspective reminiscence, perhaps, of Faure’s recently lost love.  Here the Watkins cello makes its presence known, first hesitant and groping, then lyrically expansive. The first violin then intones a truly gripping melody that swells in power and anguish. The piano proceeds by a rising scalar pattern whose contour resembles the Faure solo keyboard music, except that here the lush cadences with the strings assume “symphonic” sonorities. Kissin’s ability to subdue his sound to create a seamless blend of the moody “Faure sound” warrants repeated listening. Dotted rhythms once more mark the Allegro molto finale, the viola part’s assuming a prominent role for color and dynamism. The piano delivers a sense of relentless momentum though the lyrical second theme – viola driven – will direct the development to a passionate culmination. The keyboard writing reveals something of Faure’s debts to his master, Camille Saint-Saens. The cello leads a series of tender interplays within the string community that the piano counters with brisk, virtuoso runs. A throbbing warmth infiltrates the performance as it moves ineluctably through the composer’s blazing chromatics. The color scheme becomes more diversified and enchanted, moving with silky sophistication that never descends into empty bravura, despite the magnificent velocity and passionate impetus of the last page.

The dazzling Piano Quintet in A Major, Op. 81 by Dvorak had its premiere in 1888, with the composer at the height of his creative powers, and the keyboard part had Karol Kararovic and four expert chamber musicians. The fluent spontaneity of the composition reflects Dvorak’s happy work environment at Vysoka, his country retreat.  Utilizing grand gestures peppered with Slavic folk tunes, Dvorak fashions a work brilliant in rhythmic diversity and melodic appeal.  The opening of the work features a lulling cello melody over piano arpeggios, a feint that leads to crisp figures that do not relent while Dvorak explores various color combinations and cross rhythms. The viola introduces the secondary tune, upon which Kissin creates a sweet transition that soon gathers girth, in texture and melodic power. First violin Setzer has pride of place in the recapitulation, in which the main theme has become an illuminated procession.

The two interior movements draw their sustenance from the folk: the Dumka: Andante con moto had the principals’ discussing their slowing down their otherwise brisk tempo to maintain the depth of music’s expansive expression. The music offers two tempos, of which the faster, Un pochettino piu mosso, contains the melodic ardor, while the slower tempo, Andante con moto, projects – via the viola – a stately thoughtfulness. The music advances Vivace, to achieve the composer’s impassioned ideal of the Dumka as a “wild dance” of contrasting affects. The reflective mood returns, with Kissin’s contributing his share of liquid intimacy. The inspired Scherzo movement in opening cross-rhythms combines the Czech Furiant with a waltz motif, a strategy common to late Dvorak. For me, the amazing trio section – in which the two violins over the keyboard create an idyll – has been central to my musical sensibility ever since Clifford Curzon and the Budapest Quartet realized its superb magic. The elegant mystery of the music’s beauty no less mesmerizes us here. Dvorak appears to follow Schumann’s model in his Finale: Allegro, in which a series of interlocked melodies will undergo contrapuntal treatment in the course of their seamless evolution into the recapitulation. Somehow, in the midst of brilliant, hasty, fiery gestures, Dvorak pulls on the reins with transparent chords that yet once more invoke “and so my children” in the best bedtime-story fashion. One more (pentatonic) rush to the coda proves as compelling as any performance we know.

The Emerson players and Kissin proffer one short encore, the Allegretto from Dmitri Shostakovich’s otherwise bitter 1943 Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 57. This acerbic, playfully ironic music has its own demons, which this rendition does little to exorcise – rather, they release its driving, bellicose power in spades, to which the Carnegie Hall audience erupts with New York hysteria.

—Gary Lemco

 

 

BRAHMS: Symphony Nos. 2 & 4 – The Philadelphia Orchestra/ Leopold Stokowski – Pristine Audio 

BRAHMS: Symphony Nos. 2 & 4 – The Philadelphia Orchestra/ Leopold Stokowski – Pristine Audio 

BRAHMS: Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73; Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98 – The Philadelphia Orchestra/ Leopold Stokowski – Pristine Audio PASC 562, 79:54 [pristineclassical.com]****: 

Recording Engineer and Audio Restoration Editor Mark Obert-Thorn turns his attention to the cycle of Brahms symphonies, here with the D Major (29-30 April 1929) and the E minor (4 March and 29 April 1933), that Leopold Stokowski set down for Victor Records.  The 1877 Brahms Symphony No. 2 presents much of the emotional ambiguity in Brahms: a sunny surface often conceals a melancholy or even tragic undercurrent.  The bucolic nature of the opening French horn theme in ¾ has a vague similarity to the Beethoven Eroica, with its own asymmetrical rhythmic configurations, and the dissonant trombone effects usher in a dark hue that intensifies the elegy in the minor key of the second theme.  Stokowski’s Philadelphia players of the time constitute one of the great orchestral ensembles for homogeneity of sound and virtuosic level of execution.  Witness the treatment of the main theme fugato, in which Stokowski’s forces elicit a fine transparency. On the other hand, the three trombones in the development section offer a case in point of a sense of menace that infiltrates what would appear to be an Arcadian vision. While the plastic nature of the pastoral elements virtually shines, Stokowski no less captures the tensions at the coda where C minor and D Major clash.  The movement ends with Stokowski’s light hand on the jaunty tune that attempts to give us cheer.

The Adagio non troppo opens with a grand sense of an extensive progression, solemn and majestic. The resonance of the Philadelphia low strings has remarkable poignancy. The French horn and woodwinds add to the sense of a dark serenade, supported by luminous cellos.  Christopher Dyment calls Stokowski’s treatment “overripe,” but for Brahms adherents the music projects an elegant luster, thoughtful, meditative, and deeply personal.  A true mortal storm ensues, rife with something like the Beethoven “fate” motif superimposed on grieving, falling figures.  Typically, Brahms indulges his love of agogic shifts – hemiola – to remind us of his existential sense of life’s ambiguities. The bass line becomes ardent, the polyphony lifting the pathos of the occasion to a potent climax, stormy and melancholy. The main theme returns, chorale-like, undergirded by a solemn tympanic ostinato. Happily, the Allegretto grazioso ushers in a rustic repose, although perhaps a mite exaggerated in the Stokowski rendition.  The woodwind sonorities – particularly the Philadelphia oboe, Marcel Tabuteau – enjoy a pert sense of attack, and strings alternately bask in broad chords and brisk, short notes.  The tricky metrics of the finale daunt Stokowski not at all, and the music romps forward, the oboe prominent among pizzicato strings.  Despite various false starts and stops, the music achieves a heroic impetus, finally allowing the Philadelphia trombones a D Major fortissimo that well disperses the primordial angst that so besets the composer’s psyche.

The 1885 Fourth Symphony of Brahms combines intellectual refinement and an austere intimacy, buttressed by a masterful sense of form.  The music resists an easy popularity, depending on the inner ear’s appreciation of polyphony and inter-linking motifs based on melancholy thirds.  Stokowski engages the first movement Allegro non troppo in more blatantly “romantic” terms than he had in the Second Symphony, employing the portamento in the lulling ebb and flow we often associate with Willem Mengelberg, but less broad. Obert-Thorn notes that the recording venue, a Camden, New Jersey church, suffers sonic constriction and a lack of reverberation the restoration engineer has had to supply.  As Stokowski moves through the development, the pace and urgency increase, with the vital attacks in the strings and winds having become more pronounced.  The progressive sense of variation and emotional layering, “stretto,” becomes vivid, insistent, even tragic as Stokowski drives the coda to a resolute and irresistible conclusion.

Portrait of Johannes Brahms

Johannes Brahms

The Andante moderato in E Major evinces a subtle sense of color between the horns and winds, a sense of emotional ambiguity in muted hues.  We feel a sad march in its burgeoning stages, until the music opens into a broad sea of nostalgia, emphasized by the Philadelphia’s sliding strings.  Sometimes the dotted figures assume a “precious” character, almost too dainty for the vigor of the performance.  The cellos and violas sing out another plaintive theme, a variant on the march motif.  The emotion has become expansive, the tympani’s undergirding a tragic grandeur.  The horns and strings engage in a fierce fugato, as tormented as it is learned.  The martial utterance has dignity and resolve but no mirth. We feel as though the composer were taking the long view of a life, luxurious as it had been pervaded by regret. As an emotional foil, the C Major Allegro giocoso proffers a scherzo in athletic terms, ripe in colors provided by the piccolo and triangle. We feel the recorded space constricting the power of the temporary revel, since we know the composer’s strategy for the final movement could hardly be more severe, confining his personal, flaring passions into the artifice of a passacaglia and 32 variations and coda.

Brahms chooses a motif taken from the Bach cantata No. 150, Nach Dir, Herr, verlanget mich – come hither to me, Dear Lord for Whom I long – which he evolves as a series of orchestral character sketches, a huge, contrapuntal necklace ornamented by rich, individual pearls.  Despite Stokowski’s penchant for a brisk, virtuoso reading, the slower variants – especially the flute solo – enjoy a salon luster concentrated intimacy.  The winds and strings extend the moment into the brass, which soon catapults with a tragic frenzy to its foregone conclusion. The opening eight notes of the Bach chorale reassert themselves with demonic, uncompromising fury. The power of the reading remains, despite sonic qualifications, and Obert-Thorn has made seamless splices to achieve an artistic whole.  But as for period recordings, I must still prefer my Koussevitzky and Walter realizations of this epic victory of mind and musical matter.

—Gary Lemco

 

More Information at Pristine Website:

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The Music Treasury for 26 May 2019 — Franco Gulli, Violinist, Part 2

The Music Treasury for 12 May 2019 — Rudolf Moralt, Conductor

This week’s broadcast of The Music Treasury presents the second installment of conductor Rudolf Moralt.  Works by Strauss, Schubert, Sammartini, Mozart are featured, concluding with Brahms’ Violin Concerto.

The show airs from 19:00 to 2:00 PDT, from KZSU or kzsu.stanford.edu, hosted by Dr Gary L:emco.

Rudolf Moralt, Conductor, Part II

Nephew of Richard Strauss, Rudolf Moralt shared something of his uncle’s gift for sensitive, non-intrusive conducting. Without question, he was taken for granted by Vienna, whose Staatsoper company he helped rebuild to world standards in the aftermath of World War II. While other maestri with high ambitions constantly worked to increase their share of the limelight, Moralt simply applied himself to strengthening his company. When he was passed over for every one of the new productions scheduled for the re-opening of the Staatsoper building in 1955, he was hurt, and observers, who understood his importance for the city’s musical life, were baffled. Moralt studied at Munich University and Academy. At the age of 17, he was hired as a répétiteur at the Munich Staatsoper. In 1923, barely 21, he became conductor at the Kaiserslautern Städtische Oper. craft. From 1932 to 1934, he held the position of music director at the active Deutsches Theater in Brno. In 1934, Moralt went to Brunswick; an engagement in Graz followed in 1937. Also in 1937, he made his debut in Vienna, where he was appointed principal conductor at the Staatsoper three years later.

From 1940 to the time of his death in 1958, Moralt proved himself invaluable, as his hard work and unassuming personality helped hold together a ravaged company. In the face of wartime privations and a bombed-out house, the cadre of musicians persisted, setting the new gold standard for Mozart and Strauss. Among the several recordings attesting to Moralt‘s mastery are a Ring cycle, especially Siegfried and Die Götterdämmerung, taken from live performances in 1948 and 1949. Here, Moralt‘s lyrical approach draws strong performances from mixed casts — clearly the work of an excellent conductor. Likewise, extended scenes from Acts I and III of Arabella, recorded with Lisa della Casa in January 1953, establish Moralt as a gifted Straussian. A 1945 recording of Mozart‘s Die Entführung aus dem Serail by a Vienna Staatsoper ensemble (with Schwarzkopf as Konstanze) is a further testament to Moralt‘s exceptional gifts.  [From AllMusic.com]

Program List:
Strauss, Jr: Overture to The Gypsy Baron
Schubert: 17 German Dances
Mozart: Don Giovanni, K. 427: Act I – finale (London, Jurinac, Berry, Zadek)
Sammartini: Concerto grosso in G Major, Op. 11, No. 4
Brahms: Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 77 (w/Senofsky)

 

 

 

 

 

Dave Stryker – Eight Track III – Strikezone Records

Dave Stryker – Eight Track III – Strikezone Records

Dave Stryker – Eight Track III – Strikezone Records 8818 52:31****:

( Dave Stryker – guitar; Stefon Harris – vibraphone; Jared Gold – organ; McClenty Hunter – drums; Myra Casales – congas & percussion #2-3,6-9)

Eight track tapes are in the dustbin of the mainstream recording world,  but relics can still be found at rummage sales in church basements, or the vintage section of weekly flea markets. However the melodies that were associated with that particular technology have found a new life in the jazz world of Dave Stryker and his cohorts. In the most recent iteration Eight Track III, Stryker and the band take on some of the lesser classic tunes of the period, to produce a musically satisfying outing.

Dave Stryker’s solid band has been able to dig into all the material in a tough tenacious fashion, starting with the Curtis Mayfield number “Move On Up”. With Stryker’s opening identifiable guitar riffs and smart pacing from drummer Hunter, the group lays down a blanket of rhythm that brings the number to life.

Walter Becker & Donald Fagen better known as Steely Dan wrote “Pretzel Logic” which was the name of the group’s  third studio album. The inherent harmony that was a part of Steely Dan’s sound comes across as Stryker ’s interpretation of the number is filled with underlying intensity of the tune.

Stevie Wonder’s prodigious talent is showcased with two of his compositions “Too High” and “Joy Inside My Tears”.  The first is an up tempo swinger with a confident strut as Stryker runs the fret board with a series of sharply defined notes. Stefon Harris’ vibes are subtly confident in a brief interlude before the number plays out with frothy exuberance. The second composition is entirely different as it has a bluesy sensitive vibe. The band gives it a sinuous interpretation as they work their way through a thickened mood.

Another standout is the Marvin Gaye & Leon Ware tune “After The Dance”.  Fashioned by Gaye as a funky sexy ballad, Stryker and the band capture the essence of the number with some intricate unison playing between Stryker and Harris. With Jared Gold’s B3 organ shimmering in the background, the group keeps up the intensity with each member demonstrating their exciting technique.

The band brings these pop tunes alive with a bristling sparkle.

TrackList: Move On Up; Papa Was A Rollin’ Stone; Pretzel Logic; Too High; We’ve Only Just Begun; This Guy’s In Love With You; Everybody Loves The Sunshine; After The Dance; Joy Inside My Tears

—Pierre Giroux

 

More Information and Music at Dave Stryker’s Website:

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The Orchestral Organ: Jan Kraybill performing works by Saint-Saëns, Mendelssohn, Verdi, Wagner and others — Reference Recordings 

The Orchestral Organ: Jan Kraybill performing works by Saint-Saëns, Mendelssohn, Verdi, Wagner and others — Reference Recordings 

The Orchestral Organ: Jan Kraybill performs arrangements of works by Camille Saint-Saëns, Edward Armas Järnefelt, Emil von Řezníček, Felix Mendelssohn, Giuseppe Verdi, Gustav Holst, Jean Sibelius, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Richard Wagner, Samuel Barber — Reference Recordings SACD-CD (HDCD) Catalog No: RR-145 / Release: 5/17/19 / TT: 63:00

Musical transcriptions are nothing new. Originally written for piano, Ravel transcribed Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition into a popular piece for orchestra, performed far more frequently than the original piano version.

This fine sounding SACD goes the other way, taking orchestral music and turning it into works for Organ. These transcriptions aren’t new. For years, centuries even, popular music has been transcribed, often because there weren’t the resources available for an orchestral performance, but there was always a handy piano or organ.

Organist Jan Kraybill is up to the task of performing these transcriptions. She is a musical leader, performer, educator, organ consultant, and enthusiastic advocate for the power of music to change lives for the better. She is Organ Conservator at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in Kansas City, Missouri, and Organist-in-Residence at the international headquarters of Community of Christ in Independence, Missouri.

In these roles she plays and oversees the care of three of the Kansas City metro area’s largest pipe organs: the 113-rank Aeolian-Skinner and 102-rank Casavant organs in Community of Christ’s Auditorium and Temple, and the 102-rank Julia Irene Kauffman Casavant at the Kauffman Center’s Helzberg Hall, where The Orchestral Organ was recorded.

I listened to the 5.1 rendering of these tracks and the sound was thrilling. The organ is big and brawny, the performances are precise and committed, and Reference Recording has done their usual audiophile magic. The lower pipes of the organ are very deep, and will test your system, especially if you have a subwoofer.

Track selection is varied, with classical standards and a more contemporary work like the Adagio for Strings by Samuel Barber. I thought it worked nicely for organ. I also especially enjoyed the Sibelius Finlandia, which was stirring and joyful.  Of particular note — this release contains many “first recordings”, as well as the world premier of Řezníček’s Praelusium and Chromatic Fugue.

Musically and technically this disc is worth a listen, and frequent replays.

—Mel Martin

Track List:
Tchaikovsky: Coronation March
Barber: Adagio for Strings
Gounod: Funeral March of a Marionette
Holst: Chaconne, from First Suite for Military Band, Op. 28, No. 1
Sibelius: Finlandia
Řezníček: Praeludium and Chromatic Fugue
Saint-Saëns: Romance, from Orchestral Suite in D, Op. 49
Wagner: Forest Murmurs, from Siegfried
Mendelssohn: Scherzo, from A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Järnefelt: Praeludium for small orchestra
Verdi: Grand March, from Aïda

 

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