Saturday, November 14, 2015

Charles Roland Berry - Cello Concerto - Symphony No. 3 "Celestial" - Quileute Overture for Cello & Orchestra - Mariners Fanfare - Veery Thrush with Cedars - Janacek Philharmonic Orchestra, Theodore Kuchar - Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra, Joel Eric Suben - Centaur 2007

Here is one of the finest American composers that you have never heard of (yes, you are a cultivated bunch, and surely a handful of you out there will know this great music!). Also a guitarist and film composer, Charles Roland Berry (born 1957 in Boston, MA) has written symphonies, concertos, string quartets, and solo works. Among Berry's composition teachers was the American master Paul Creston, whose tutelage came about rather late (Creston worked with Berry during 1982-1983) and to my ears (happily), Creston had a lasting effect on the composer. The rapturous Cello Concerto is a very fine and exciting work, and the Symphony No. 3 "Celestial" is a simply beautiful, modal work with a clear tonal center. There are several passages that are somewhat reminiscent of Hovhaness (especially during the first movement), and for me that's always a delight.


Charles Roland Berry



Here are some of the notes by the composer:

"The works on the new Centaur Records CD were composed in 2002 and 2003 in Seattle, Washington. They show a variety of style and structure, all with predominantly tonal harmonies. I have experimented with Form, more than with tonality. I am also interested in the interactions between Melody and Rhythm. I will often contrast irregular halting rhythms against a lyrical melodic line. Olympic Mountains Overture is tribute to the grandeur of these mountains, and can be considered a tone poem. Quileute Overture was inspired by a visit to La Push, Washington, home to the Quileute Indian tribe. This tribe lives between the mountains and the sea, a stormy place, which gave rise to myths of the Thunderbird. This piece uses no Native American music, though I attempted to create an exotic mood, using unusual orchestration, with ocarina.

Symphony No. 3 and the Cello Concerto are large scale works, with contrasting movements. My intention was to explore different ways, to create a coherent form for each of these movements. The overall mood of Symphony No.3 is calm and optimistic, which led me to subtitle the work, "Celestial".The first inspiration for my Cello Concerto was recordings of standard repertoire, performed by Lynn Harrell. After the piece began, I drew inspiration from the performance techniques of Walter Gray. I have dedicated the work to Walter Gray, in gratitude for his artistry and friendship. He was the first cellist play the solo score of the Concerto, and the solo cello part for Quileute Overture.

My intention with each of these works was to compose music which is both accessible and modern, music which can be enjoyed by the concert-goers who enjoy standard romantic and classical repertoire. I have deliberately avoided many well-established, contemporary composition techniques, because I feel those techniques alienate many listeners. I believe a composer can be adventurous and original, without inventing new musical languages, arcane languages, which are unintelligible to most listeners. My intention is to offer some familiar reference points, and then reach beyond those references to new forms of expression. Coherence in any piece is achieved by some kind of repetition. By choosing which fragments are repeated, how often, and in what disguise---I am able to create Forms which have infinite variety, and  rely little on any historical forms. I use intellectual planning, only to get started with a piece - later I find preconceived plans, whether Classical, Romantic, or Serialist, get in the way of the music."

Meanwhile I have no idea if the "Olympic Mountains Overture" Berry mentions in the notes is recorded...it's not on this Centaur release!)

*Thank you to anyone who was kind enough to leave comments over the last couple days; it's a hectic time right now but I wanted to at least offer a great weekend post. I shall read and reply to everyone by Sunday evening :)

Enjoy!!

C.R.Berry_Cello_Concerto_Symphony_No.3-tzadik.zip

http://www9.zippyshare.com/v/USB4eoc9/file.html

7 comments:

Mariano said...

thanks a lot for supporting music diffusion

Unknown said...

Esta vez sí,me madrugaste(en términos de gaucho,me sorprendiste bien).Jamás oi nada de este extraño autor,ya lo disfruto,más si tiene reminiscencias del gran Hovahness,querido Tzadik.Un gran abrazooooooooooooooooooooo,tu loco amigo Tapirman,el irredento por las musas!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

cjvinthechair said...

No, you beat me, Mr. T - only thing I've found of his is 'virtual' music !
Look forward to giving it a try, thanks !

Tzadik said...

Mariano you are welcome, thanks for commenting!

TZ

Tzadik said...

Hola "loco médico-T" Wow, es difícil a veces para publicar compositores que no conoces acerca .... un triunfo luego! :) Creo que realmente va a disfrutar de la música de Berry. Es Berry, Berry, buena (mala broma de mal gusto, lo siento). Hovhaness venga a la mente un poco. Dime lo que pensar en el disco cuando tenga tiempo!

TZZZZZZ

Tzadik said...

Cjv- by virtual do you mean online 'samples'? (or am I ignorant to Berry composing a piece called "Virtual Music"....oooooh sounds sooo 'modern' if that's the case ;)

TZ

sazor said...

Dead link.