Rolling Classical 2019

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Some good stuff at the New Music Now marathon yesterday: premiere of a new song cycle by Kelly-Marie Murphy, with text drawn from Ethel Rosenberg's letters. I always find her work satisfyingly well-structured. This one packs an emotional punch. Emili Losier seems like a really strong singer: she had to bring out a pretty wide dynamic range with some sustained vibrato pitches in a very high register. I also really enjoyed James Rolfe's raW, another Ottawa composer but one I was unfamiliar with. Reminded me a bit of Andriessen. I picked up this CD: http://www.jamesrolfe.ca/discography/raw-chamber-music-by-james-rolfe/ . Some creative new works from young composers in the first set. Mathilde Cote's piece was probably the standout for me there.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 02:20 (four years ago) link

Thanks, I'll look into them. My knowledge of Canadian contemporary music is wanting, alas.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 7 August 2019 10:53 (four years ago) link

Btw Sund4r (and others), this disc of Estonian works for (electric) guitar(s) and choir is pretty cool:

http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2019/May/Estonian_incantations_v1_TOCN0002.htm

pomenitul, Wednesday, 7 August 2019 11:01 (four years ago) link

Listening to it on Naxos Online now, thanks.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 13:59 (four years ago) link

Coming to value Pletnev (as pianist) more and more lately. I’m not sure if he just 100% conducts now but he is absolutely top echelon among modern practitioners imo, right up there with kocsis, moravec, argerich, anyone.

valet doberman (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 14:10 (four years ago) link

I overdosed on the Russian piano school a while back and haven't revisited it since, but your points of comparison make him seem appealing, to say the least. Which of his recitals have you been listening to?

pomenitul, Wednesday, 7 August 2019 14:23 (four years ago) link

Live stuff - the Carnegie hall 2cd and an unofficial Wigmore Hall that was doing the file sharing rounds a few years back (Debussy preludes book 1 plus Brahms Handel variations). Also his spectacular studio discs of CPE Bach and Scarlatti.

valet doberman (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 14:44 (four years ago) link

Added them to my list, thanks.

pomenitul, Wednesday, 7 August 2019 15:55 (four years ago) link

Btw Sund4r (and others), this disc of Estonian works for (electric) guitar(s) and choir is pretty cool:

This album is beautiful.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Thursday, 8 August 2019 14:56 (four years ago) link

Yep. And it's a genuinely unusual mix – I can't think of any other such pieces.

pomenitul, Thursday, 8 August 2019 15:01 (four years ago) link

Ha, I actually did play digitally processed electric guitar with the University of Regina choir one time, on a Gregorian chant; it was the conductor's idea. It was fun.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Thursday, 8 August 2019 15:08 (four years ago) link

It's on Youtube, though it might not really be a competitor to Estonian Incantations.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Thursday, 8 August 2019 15:17 (four years ago) link

many xp

The Sibelius Violin Concerto is unbearably difficult and extremely lovely, yes

I get parts of "Requiem For A Party Girl" in my head like once a week, he said, leaning forward and expaAAAAAaanding his head as he did so

flamboyant goon tie included, Thursday, 8 August 2019 16:14 (four years ago) link

Unfortunately the Tchaik performance I posted (Nadja S-S) was not the version I was thinking of. Me and my friend (violinist Eoin Andersen) were snorting up a lot of Nadja and then he played me this magical version of Tchaik and it wasn't Nadja, I'm still waiting to hear back from him about who it actually was, it was crazy, it sounded like Looney Tunes and it redeemed (for me) a work I've never previously enjoyed

flamboyant goon tie included, Thursday, 8 August 2019 16:16 (four years ago) link

I get parts of "Requiem For A Party Girl" in my head like once a week, he said, leaning forward and expaAAAAAaanding his head as he did so

Actually, this is a good one if you're looking for drama/despair/catharsis.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Thursday, 8 August 2019 17:41 (four years ago) link

OK, here's the comedy rendition

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kbdy5Ldeo70&app=desktop

I am suddenly the biggest fan of this concerto

flamboyant goon tie included, Thursday, 8 August 2019 18:22 (four years ago) link

Link doesn't work on my end. :(

pomenitul, Thursday, 8 August 2019 18:24 (four years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kbdy5Ldeo70

Really guys

Listen to this

flamboyant goon tie included, Thursday, 8 August 2019 18:30 (four years ago) link

Ahhh, yes! I actually have heard this version and it's fucking awesome. I love all musicians involved.

pomenitul, Thursday, 8 August 2019 18:33 (four years ago) link

I KNEW it was going to be kopatchinskaja after that last post of yours!

valet doberman (Jon not Jon), Thursday, 8 August 2019 19:16 (four years ago) link

IT'S CRAZY

flamboyant goon tie included, Thursday, 8 August 2019 21:28 (four years ago) link

Slowly but surely catching up with my 2019 list before making my way back to everyone's suggestions upthread… Today I've got:

1. Wilhelmina Smith, works for solo cello by Kaija Saariaho and Esa-Pekka Salonen. I still consider myself a Saariaho fan despite how underwhelming most of her postmillennial output has been. With the exception of Dreaming Chaconne (paraphrasing Giuseppe Colombi's baroque Chiacona, also included here), Smith draws on Saariaho's overtly spectral mid-period (Petals, Sept Papillons, Spins and Spells), which makes for ever-fascinating listening. Salonen, on the other hand, whom I generally appreciate as a conductor, has never impressed me as a composer and none of the pieces on display here strike me as memorable in any way, shape or form: structurally they're easier to keep up with than those of Saariaho, but their neo-classical clarity only serves to underscore how utterly bland and middle-of-the-road the writing is. Nor does setting them beside Saariaho's do Salonen any favours. Ultimately, while Smith is a persuasive musician, I see no reason to pick up this disc over Alexis Descharmes's complete recital or, better yet, Anssi Karttunen's performances, disseminated across several Saariaho monographs.

2. Filigree, chamber music by Hannah Lash, with the composer herself (a harpist) and the JACK Quartet. I got wind of this one because the latter are ever-reliable guides when it comes to contemporary classical. I should probably spend more time with it before dishing out an amateur verdict, but overall I found these pieces quite intriguing. The controlled awkwardness of Frayed, for string quartet, brings to mind John Cage's String Quartet in Four Parts, whereas the Suite (Remembered and Imagined), also for string quartet, is a somewhat eccentric pastiche of polystylism (a pastiche of pastiche?) that variously evokes baroque music, Ligeti, Berg, Shostakovich, Julian Anderson (with whom she studied), and (of course) a pinch of Schnittke, minus the hopeless chaos. Then we have a final work for the JACK Quartet, Pulse-Space, a disquieting, expressionist take on minimalism that brings the disc's emotional heft out into the open. Lastly, Filigree in Textile, a quintet for harp and string quartet, borrows its melodic contours from medieval music. Tapestry metaphorically informs her writing throughout, reminding one of Morton Feldman, but Lash's impulses remain rooted – broadly speaking – in Romanticism: even when the work is at its most gnomic (the second movement, played pizzicato), a yarn is being spun into narrative rather than into an endlessly self-proliferating non-human object that appears to be subject to its own enigmatic laws. Anyhow, I very much enjoyed this and would love to hear more stuff by her.

3. Influences, a highly personal piano recital by the discreet and undersung Tamara Stefanovich (who is married to Pierre-Laurent Aimard, incidentally), featuring works by Bach, Ives, Bartók and Messiaen. As much as I admire Aimard's playing, which is unimpeachably idiomatic in Messiaen and Ligeti (among others), Stefanovich exhibits just as much precision and transparency without giving the impression that she's on the outside looking in. Her playing is a paradox (just the way I like it): ardent and dispassionate, mystical and analytical, Stoic and Epicurean, etc. This works especially well in Ives's First Sonata, which I'd never quite gotten before hearing her perform it, but Bartók's Eight Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs, Messiaen's Cantéyodjayâ and Bach's Aria variata alla maniera italiana also benefit from her impossible sense of synthesis. She makes the strongest possible case for these lesser-known works by well-known composers.

pomenitul, Friday, 9 August 2019 10:48 (four years ago) link

I really like Lash's Sonata for Harp, released on Bandcamp in 2016. I think we talked about it a bit at the time in the context of 'neo-Romanticism'. Just a well-crafted composition written solidly in a traditional form using a modern but tonal harmonic language and some asymmetrical metres, without any of the bombast that usually comes with 'neo-Romanticism'; she played it sensitively and the recording sounded beautiful. I'll definitely look out for this collaboration with JACK. Sounds like she might be pushing the envelope a little more with some of this stuff.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Friday, 9 August 2019 13:28 (four years ago) link

You're right, I'd completely forgotten. I'll have to listen to the Sonata for Harp again in light of the disc with the JACK Quartet.

pomenitul, Friday, 9 August 2019 13:48 (four years ago) link

Speaking of which, Saariaho's Harp Concerto is quite good. It's on a recent Ondine disc with True Fire, a decent song cycle for baritone and orchestra she wrote for the great Gerald Finley, and Ciel d'hiver, a rather more featureless tone poem that exemplifies most of what I dislike about her late style.

pomenitul, Saturday, 10 August 2019 13:38 (four years ago) link

Oh, and on the subject of canonical contemporary Nordic composers, Whirl's World, Per Nørgård's latest Dacapo disc, showcasing four chamber works, including the Suite he drew from Babette's Feast, is top drawer stuff. But then again I love his music almost indiscriminately.

pomenitul, Saturday, 10 August 2019 13:46 (four years ago) link

Listening to Jean Barraqué's Piano Sonata again for the nth time. I still have no idea why this work is supposed to be so compelling and important.

pomenitul, Monday, 12 August 2019 13:52 (four years ago) link

This is the Saariaho harp concerto?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F0LbM7Y9P6Y
https://saariaho.org/works/trans/

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Monday, 12 August 2019 17:08 (four years ago) link

Yep.

pomenitul, Monday, 12 August 2019 17:12 (four years ago) link

As expected, Aki Takahashi's recording of Morton Feldman's For Bunita Marcus is perfectly idiomatic.

pomenitul, Thursday, 15 August 2019 18:00 (four years ago) link

Oh, I've seen that piece performed live at the Music Gallery in Toronto in the early to mid-00s. (Don't remember the pianist.) I remember it being a lovely, meditative experience.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Thursday, 15 August 2019 18:13 (four years ago) link

I saw Takahashi perform it in New York in the early 2000s sometime. It was pretty amazing.

shared unit of analysis (unperson), Thursday, 15 August 2019 23:13 (four years ago) link

A quick ilx search revealed who the pianist was:

I just got back from seeing Brigitte Poulin play Morton Feldman's For Bunita Marcus at the Music Gallery. It was a very serene 90 minutes contemplating the complexities of life while picking out patterns of light and shade in the stained glass in my doped-up haze while the sparse piano tones rang into each other. I listened to a Derek Bailey/Evan Parker concert from 1980 too today BTW. Also Sonny Sharrock, the Beatles, Funkadelic, De La Soul, and Beck
― sund4r subramanian (sund4r), samedi 24 mai 2003 21:20 (sixteen years ago) bookmarkflaglink

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Friday, 16 August 2019 04:16 (four years ago) link

Sund4r, what do you make of this stuff? I'm curious…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBaXl3xuumE

pomenitul, Friday, 16 August 2019 18:19 (four years ago) link

I''ll listen tonight!

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Friday, 16 August 2019 19:56 (four years ago) link

I liked that a lot. Pretty impressive how they managed to sustain my interest over 18 and a half minutes of noise. I found Prins's sounds really appealing and there was a lot of very effective variation and development in timbre, texture, and dynamics. Dramatic. Interesting that, judging by how intently they seem to be reading their scores, I'm guessing it's fairly strictly notated? I'd be interested to know more about what the score is like and what sorts of processing are going on. Looks like Deutsch might be using the same Behringer MIDI foot controller I have.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Saturday, 17 August 2019 02:23 (four years ago) link

I'll give it another shot then. I listened to it yesterday as part of Prins's Kairos monograph and while I really admire his sense of texture, I struggled to make out even the least iota of a continuous form, although I wasn't listening very intently, either. I don't get that as much with, say, Richard Barrett, of whom he reminds me in some ways.

pomenitul, Saturday, 17 August 2019 09:16 (four years ago) link

Continuous form = rockist

Seriously, if I hadn't seen them reading sheet music, I would have guessed it was a free improvisation (and I enjoy a lot of free improv). It definitely doesn't have the kind of evident sectional form that you find in Barrett's transmission (which, possibly ironically, does include improvised sections). However, I felt like the guitar and live electronic parts were conversing effectively. I also have a pretty high tolerance for guitar/electronics, though.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Saturday, 17 August 2019 13:14 (four years ago) link

lol then this can only mean one thing: Stefan Prins is an arch-poptimist.

Speaking of music for guitar, you may also be interested in this album (which I haven't heard yet):

http://hundredyearsgallery.co.uk/refracted-resonance/

pomenitul, Saturday, 17 August 2019 14:23 (four years ago) link

Oh, thanks. Tellur is a great piece.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Saturday, 17 August 2019 14:55 (four years ago) link

I take it back. Not I was really compelling the second time around, no less than the rest of that Kairos disc. I need to watch the accompanying DVD as well.

pomenitul, Sunday, 18 August 2019 17:22 (four years ago) link

Started reading Marilyn Nonken’s The Spectral Piano. Really good so far.

valet doberman (Jon not Jon), Sunday, 18 August 2019 21:54 (four years ago) link

That sounds interesting.

I'm still listening to Gann's Hyperchromatica all the time in the van. It's starting to turn into comfort food.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Sunday, 18 August 2019 22:08 (four years ago) link

Thanks for the heads up, Jon. I've added it to my reading list.

pomenitul, Monday, 19 August 2019 10:34 (four years ago) link

As expected, Aki Takahashi's recording of Morton Feldman's For Bunita Marcus is perfectly idiomatic.

― pomenitul, Thursday, August 15, 2019 11:00 AM (one week ago) bookmarkflaglink

really love this, thanks.

apparently my jam is lengthy motionless piano works

president of deluded fruitcakes anonymous (silby), Monday, 26 August 2019 21:57 (four years ago) link

Check out Musica Callada by Mompou in that case

valet doberman (Jon not Jon), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 11:57 (four years ago) link

cosign!

pomenitul, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 12:27 (four years ago) link

wow otm. I uh, might have to try n play some of these.

president of deluded fruitcakes anonymous (silby), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:58 (four years ago) link

On the topic of Spanish composers, I saw an interesting and provocative talk by Stephen Goss on Sunday titled "The Guitar and the Politics of Nostalgia: the mutability of history through an
Arcadian retrotopia." He began by talking about how right-wing political movements (MAGA, "Taking Back Control") often construct myths of a glorious past (an "Arcadian retrotopia") and then connected this "politics of nostalgia" to the history of the classical guitar: first, its anachronistic presence in 19th c English and French literary and artistic depictions of medieval Spain (apparently weirdly regarded as exotic, 'Oriental', and primitive at the time) and then, the way it became reappropriated as a symbol of Spanish nationalist identity in the 20th century, especially in the Franco regime after the Civil War. Rodrigo in particular was discussed as a (hyper-conservative, neo-Romantic) composer whose work was used this way. The whole Segovia project was also examined: the way he virtually constructed a 'classical' repertoire for the instrument by commissioning this stable of conservative Spanish (sometimes Latin American) composers to write neo-Romantic music, in which he was highly interventionist, and commissioned transcriptions of canonical works for other instruments. A quick search afterwards did reveal that we now know Segovia to have privately been a strong supporter of Franco, something I might have figured out if I'd thought about it for 10 minutes: https://books.google.ca/books?id=ORsxDwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA92&dq=andres%20segovia%20politics%20franco&hl=fr&pg=PA92#v=onepage&q=andres%20segovia%20politics%20franco&f=false

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 18:23 (four years ago) link

Speaking of reactionary neo-Romantics, I tried listening to Rolf Martinsson's latest BIS monograph, Into Eternity, and was tempted to post about it in the rolling worst 2019 music thread. Tbf, the works themselves range from 2012 to 2015 and Martinsson studied under Brian Ferneyhough – neither of which you'd guess based on the sub-Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer orchestral writing and programmatic attempt at erasing the 20th century from living memory (except for Strauss and Mahler and maybe Florent Schmitt). I'd be curious to hear some of his earlier works, which are reportedly arch-modernist in idiom.

pomenitul, Thursday, 29 August 2019 09:04 (four years ago) link


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