Thursday, July 9, 2015

Thomas F. Dunhill - Symphony in A minor - Richard Arnell - Lord Byron: A Symphonic Portrait - Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Martin Yates - Dutton Epoch 2008

Here's another enlightening and invaluable disc of unsung British symphonic music from Dutton's Epoch series. I got this for the Arnell (I have already posted several Arnell discs, and there are more to come), one of my favorite British composers ever since I discovered his music on Dutton about eight years ago. Thomas F. Dunhill (1877-1946) I know only from this recording of his Symphony and one other disc.


Thomas Dunhill was born in London in 1877 and studied with Charles Stanford and Frederick Taylor at the Royal College of Music. He later became a professor at that school and also taught at Eton. To promote the music of his contemporaries, he founded in 1907 the "Thomas Dunhill Chamber Concerts" and also worked as a conductor. His compositional output was not vast but included light operas (his most successful genre), ballets, orchestral works, chamber music and songs. In addition to his single Symphony, making its recorded debut on this release, some of his other works for orchestra written over the span of four decades and ranging from serious to light are: "Rhapsody in A minor" (1903), a suite for small orchestra "The Pixies" (1908), "Capricious Variations on an Old English Tune for Cello and Orchestra" (1910), prelude "The King's Threshold" (1913), "Elegiac Variations on an Original Theme" (1922), "Chiddingfold Suite for Strings" (1922), The "Guildford Suite" (1925), "Triptych - Three Impressions for Viola and Orchestra" (1942), "Waltz Suite" (1943) and overture "May-Time" (1945).

Dunhill's Symphony in A minor was first conceived in 1913 and completed in 1916. It received a reading at the RCM in 1922 but had its official premiere that same year in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. The first British performance took place the following year in Bournemouth conducted by the composer. Before disappearing prior to this current recording the Symphony would receive several further hearings with its last one being in 1935.

The Symphony makes an immediate impression as a big, warm, tuneful and memorable statement. It is decidedly conventional and old-fashioned even for its own time. No influence of the folksong movement or Delian pantheism is evident while the influence of Elgar's Symphonies is unmistakable though not pervasive. Despite its gestation during World War I the music lacks any significant sounds of deep anxiety. The opening movement is forceful, though perhaps a little over-extended, and abounds in big tunes one of which bears a striking resemblance to a similar melody in Ernest Chausson's Symphony in B flat major. The rollicking scherzo might remind the listener of Litolff's famous scherzo from his Concerto Symphonique No. 4 but it is pure delight. The slow movement marked adagio non troppo is haunting and the work's crowning section. Here is where Elgar's spirit looms large in its elegiac beauty. The last movement returns to the soundworld of the first movement and moves inexorably towards a grand climax that ought to bring any audience to its feet. 

The main course for me is Arnell's  Symphonic Portrait "Lord Byron." Like Dunhill two generations before him, Arnell was born in London and studied at the Royal College of Music. His composition teacher was John Ireland who, again like Dunhill, was a student of Stanford. He spent a number of years in America where his music was championed by Bernard Herrmann and other conductors and a number of his major works received performances. Back in England after World War II, Beecham became a patron as well but Arnell's prominence eventually faded when composers of his tonal ilk were consigned to near-oblivion by the musical fashion-police.

Those familiar with Arnell's expansive post-romantic/conservative modern idiom will find much to enjoy in "Lord Byron". Written in 1952, the work was commissioned and first performed by Sir Thomas Beecham and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. It plays without a break for more than 21 minutes but is divided into eight distinct sections that highlight six episodes in the poet's life girded by a prelude and an epilogue. This very descriptive music ranges from gentle to soaring and is delightful from beginning to end.

Thomas F. Dunhill - Symphony in A minor, Op. 48

1)Moderato
2)Prestissimo
3)Adagio non troppo
4)Allegro

Richard Arnell - Lord Byron, Symphonic Portrait

5)Prelude
6)Newstead
7)Augusta
8)Success & Disgrace
9)Voyage
10)Serenade
11)Battles
12)Epilogue

Enjoy..

Arnell_Lord Byron_Symphonic_Portrait_Dunhill_Symphony-Tzadik.zip

http://www88.zippyshare.com/v/oqkTpBNA/file.html

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

A Far Cry: The Law of Mosaics - Andrew Norman - The Companion Guide To Rome for String Orchestra - Ted Hearne - Law Of Mosaics for String Orchestra - A Far Cry - Crier Records 2014

A Far Cry is a self-conducted chamber/string orchestra based in Boston, MA made up of 18 members from the Boston area. They are an incredible ensemble pushing the boundaries of "classical" music, with premieres of new music as well as performances and recordings of contemporary music in general. "The Law of Mosaics" is their first release on Crier Records, their in-house label. There is  a second release out now too that I will post soon. Both Andrew Norman's electrifying "The Companion Guide To Rome" and Ted Hearne's "Law Of Mosaics" impressed me right away. This is an entirely fresh sonic experience (and in several sections of the Hearn piece, an exciting "mash-up" of sorts injects through quotation familiar gems from the Baroque, imo thrilling in effect. This certainly isn't a lush Respighi transcription!) The last movement of Norman's "The Companion Guide To Rome", "Sabina" is especially memorable (it's also a stand-alone piece) in it's lyricism and I find myself playing it several times, repeat style.



In 2007, composer and newly minted Rome Prize-recipient Andrew Norman found himself among 15 artists and 15 scholars heading to the Eternal City for a period of several months of reflection and writing. The defining work produced from this opportunity was "The Companion Guide to Rome, a 30-plus minute string trio (later also for string orchestra as played here) in nine movements, each one taking cue from a different Roman church, that in 2012 was named as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Music. Norman describes the work as being "informed by the proportions of the churches, the qualities of their surfaces, the patterns in their floors, the artwork on their walls, and the lives and legends of the saints whose names they bear. The more I worked on these miniatures, the less they had to do with actual buildings and the more they became character studies of imaginary people, my companions for a year of living in the Eternal City."

"The Companion Guide to Rome", which  changes mood and mode on a dime, is launched (1st movement, "Teresa") with frenzied layers of glissandi. The experience is disorienting, not unlike a jet-lagged stumble through the narrow streets of an unfamiliar city. In less than a minute, transported into movement two, "Benedetto", resonant puffs of rising, flute-like lines expose the height of the space. Here, and throughout the architecturally-inspired Companion Guide, Norman evocatively delineates the contours of individual interiors–and the wonder that accompanies such first impressions-through cyclic motives, lofty harmonics and consonant chords that wander in and out of focus. (Of particular note is violist Jason Fisher’s solo entry, "Susanna", which shivers and stutters like dried leaves at the steps of a secluded chapel. Again prepare to be entertained and wowed (I know I am anyhow!). A complete knock-out.

A preternaturally talented aural cannibal, Ted Hearne dines on Barber’s Adagio for Strings, Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, and, of course, Companion Guide to Rome among others for his half of the album. It is A Far Cry’s deft timbral manipulations and Hearne’s lack of irony that invite seventh and eighth listens. I think everyone will be cracking a grin with the appearance of Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in the second movement, "Palindrome for Andrew Norman", with said fragments of Baroque music abruptly slicing into the contemporary whirlwind-this too I play over and over, can't get enough. The thrust here is not the proverbial wink-wink, but an ecstatic, virtuosic savoring of the canon. Like shaking a bin of Legos, a coveted piece that has been there all along suddenly materializes at the top of the heap. The heavy dose of reverb applied to Hearne's work may at first throw some listeners for a loop (as it keeps the players at a distance), however the device seems intentional upon further passes. An absolute knock-out as well.



Enjoy!

A_Far_Cry-The_Law_Of_Mosaics-Tzadik.zip

http://www50.zippyshare.com/v/8PK81ry2/file.html

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Happy 155th Birthday Gustav Mahler - Symphony No. 1 "Titan" - Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Pierre Boulez - Deutsche Grammophon 1999

It feels as if just the other day Mahler was just 154 years old. I wanted to post "Das Lied von der Erde" however it seems that almost my entire Mahler stash is indeed......a bit too stashed; thus we have this splendid recording of the 1st Symphony. Just as well, I hear his symphonies are not bad ;)











It's doubtful that any visitors here are lacking in information on Mahler's 1st. So, onto the music that must include "everything" we go..

Enjoy!

Mahler_Symphony_No.1_%22Titan%22-Tzadik.zip

http://www11.zippyshare.com/v/S8hvXZ0w/file.html

Friday, July 3, 2015

Happy 4th of July! Don Gillis - Portrait of a Frontier Town - The Alamo - Symphony No. 7: Saga of a Prairie School - Sinfonia Varsovia, Ian Hobson - Albany Records 2006

Hello all. I figured I might as well do a 4th-of-July post....really it's just an excuse to share some good American music. I was torn between so many possibilities (Piston, Diamond, Creston, Otto Luening, George Walker, Robert Ward, Leo Sowerby, William Grant Still, Quincy Porter all were top choices...) however really all I wanted was to be able to locate my favorite Copland recording (on Vanguard Classics) with the beautiful and poignant "Our Town" Suite, possibly my favorite Copland work-also on the recording are fantastic readings of "Quiet City", "An Outdoor Overture", and the "Lincoln Portrait". It's all performed impeccably by the Utah Symphony Orchestra under Maurice Abravanel. Hopefully I will find the disc before next year! 

So as I was going through a pile of some of the above mentioned albums, Don Gillis's Orchestral Works Vol. 1 toppled down to the floor. It made things easy. Happily, Gillis's music has much in common with Aaron Copland's; there are wide-open prairies and folksong, and an authentic Americana atmosphere throughout. How to sum up Don Gillis in one sentence? He wrote "feel good" music to make people happy. Everyone everywhere can always use more of that..


"I think it is unimportant for a composer to wonder about what posterity thinks of him. It is more important that he be faithful to his own beliefs in music. He must be the final critic, and he must write what is his own, regardless of current trends or popularity. If his music reflects folk quality, it must be because it is a natural thing, not a contrived use of folk material merely to be 'American.' Honesty, above all things, is the important ingredient a composer needs."

- Don Gillis


Among those neglected American composers ripe for rediscovery, one of the most deserving is Don Gillis (1912-1978). His light-hearted and good-natured scores, imbued with the flavor and spirit of the great Southwest, are quintessential Americana as you will hear.


Gillis was born in Cameron, Missouri on June 17, 1912. As a boy, he studied the trumpet and trombone with private teachers and performed in the Cameron Rotary Club band and his high school orchestra. While still in high school he formed a jazz band for which he prepared arrangements and wrote original pieces. The Gillis family moved to Fort Worth, Texas when Don was 17 years old. In 1931, he enrolled in Texas Christian University as a scholarship trombone player, and became student director of the popular Horned Frog Band during his junior year. He graduated in 1935 and moved on to advanced studies in composition and orchestration at North Texas State University in Denton. Following a two-year stint as staff arranger and producer for a local Fort Worth radio station, Gillis became a member of the production team for NBC's Chicago affiliate. It was about this time that his first major works appeared. The year 1937 saw the publication of the orchestral suites The Panhandle and Thoughts Provoked On Becoming a Prospective Papa; The Raven (tone poem); Willy the Wollyworm(!?) (for narrator and orchestra); and The Crucifixion, a cantata for radio.

In 1944, after only a year in Chicago, NBC brought Gillis to New York to serve as chief producer and writer for the prestigious NBC Symphony Orchestra concerts, working with Arturo Toscanini (with whom he established a close personal friendship) and other renowned conductors. He held this post until the demise of the Orchestra in 1954.

Administrative activities continued to occupy Don Gillis in succeeding years. From 1958 to 1961 he was vice-president of the Interlochen Music Camp in Michigan; chairman of the music department at Southern Methodist University (1967-68); and from 1968 to 1972, he served as chairman of the fine arts department at Dallas Baptist College. In 1973, he was appointed composer-in-residence at the University of South Carolina in Columbia. 

The composer's busy schedule did not prevent him from accumulating an astonishingly prodigious catalog of musical works. In a creative career that spanned four decades, he composed prolifically in all forms: 12 symphonies (including one for concert band); seven operas; two Piano Concertos; Rhapsodies for harp and orchestra, and trumpet and orchestra; cantatas; several works for narrator and orchestra; numerous tone poems and orchestral suites; six string quartets and three woodwind quintets; and works for band of every description. One of his last compositions was called The Secret History of the Birth of a Nation, written in 1976 for the American Bicentennial.

Under the batons of Arturo Toscanini, Frank Black, Antal Dorati, Guido Cantelli, and the composer himself, the NBC Symphony Orchestra performed many of Don Gillis' works, including the world premieres of his Fifth and Eighth Symphonies as well as the radio premiere of Symphony No. 5 1/2. Gillis never forgot his close personal ties to the Orchestra or to Toscanini. So, when NBC decided to disband the orchestra following Toscanini's retirement, it was Don Gillis who spearheaded the efforts to reconstitute the ensemble as the Symphony Of The Air. In 1967, he composed a heartfelt tribute to the "Maestro" which he called "Toscanini: A Portrait of a Century".

I would go into detail about the music but I'm 'supposed' to have cooked a dish for a gathering tomorrow. Also should have been asleep 3 hours ago. Instead I'm listening to Don Gillis, and having a rollicking good time at that ;)

Enjoy everyone!

Don_Gillis_Portrait_The_Alamo_Symphony_No.7-Tzadik.zip

http://www56.zippyshare.com/v/SJhoomIa/file.html

Alan Hovhaness - Requiem and Resurrection for Brass Choir and Percussion - Symphony No. 19 "Vishnu" - Sevan Philharmonic, Alan Hovhaness conducting - Crystal Records 1990/Poseidon Society 1971

When I bought this disc a couple decades ago I was a bit perplexed and surprised by the music it contained. For the first time (or not...I may have heard "Fra Angelico" or "Mountains and Rivers Without End" earlier-I cannot remember-anyhow one of those three works was my 1st outing experiencing the "other" AH style) I was listening to Hovhaness's music with an avant-garde leaning, full of his "spirit murmur" aleatoric techniques (many of his modal and indeed better known works too use his pioneering "controlled chaos", however typically they are brief passages that seem to emerge out of nowhere and slowly fade just as mysteriously..) and brass glissandi that excites and almost overwhelms with it's cosmic power. These works, such as the two featured here, are every bit as steeped in Hovhaness's deep spirituality and musical grandeur not unlike "Mysterious Mountain", "Celestial Gate", "Psalm & Fugue", and so on; we simply get to travel through an aural galaxy that seems almost primordial and alien in it's extreme originality (Symphony No. 19 "Vishnu" is, to my mind and ears-one of Hovhaness's greatest symphonies, an extreme masterpiece, unlike anything else in "the cosmos"). This is music of the absolute *highest* order. 


The "Vishnu Symphony" is one of the most original orchestral works of the 20th century, and deserves to be widely known. Right from the unsettling low-brass growlings of the very opening, it is clear that this is a work of astonishing invention. It is certainly his boldest work with regard to exploring the limitless sonorities afforded by his 'senza misura' aleatoric technique, which had come a very long way from the hushed pizzicato murmurings of 1944's Lousadzak. Yet the composer's facility with what he called 'controlled chaos' allows it to sound completely at home in this adorational hymn to the universe, where its purpose is to portray mystery, magnitude and cosmic energy. The aspect of the Hindu god Vishnu with which this tone poem is principally concerned is related to his most ancient character as a solar god, depicting him as "protector and preserver of the life of the spheres in their endless rotations and spiral motions". From the composer's own description, it is clearly a very ambitious work:

"In Symphony Vishnu I continue to explore my invention of 'spirit sounds' or 'controlled chaos' first introduced in Lousadzak which I composed in 1944. In Vishnu I develop whirling waves of sounds to their apex of elaboration. 'Controlled chaos' is achieved by precise and exact written notes of irregular and varying patterns, played simultaneously at variable speeds. Sometimes the sounds are delicate and mysterious. At other times bells, trombones and trumpets reach climaxes of wild, free sounds circling like orbits of fire".

"Vishnu symbolizes the creative forces of the galaxies. The symphony suggests the concept of the circulation of divine energies throughout the universes. Wild but controlled chaos bursts out in brass and percussion in free, rhythmless passages, followed by bells. This might symbolize the explosions which take place in the central core of giant galaxies of stars when millions of suns explode simultaneously, throwing out new universes of stars and planetary systems."

Alan Hovhaness, Poseidon Society disc annotation:

Originally conceived as a cosmic tone poem entitled To Vishnu, the work is in one continuous movement cast as "an unfolding giant melody of adoration to the immensity and sublimity of limitless stellar universes". The giant melodic line is "non-harmonic, [but] unisonal or soloistic, with bells, drums and drones". The different sections of adorational melody ("hymns and love songs to nature, plants, forests, waters, mountains, planets, suns and galaxies") are preceded and punctuated by "clouds or mists of sounds". The clouds in question are "volcanic clouds, storm clouds, celestial clouds, nebula clouds, star clouds". All instruments are involved in the cloud music at various times. Since each 'controlled chaos' cloud is written using the notes of a distinct scale or mode, what we hear is a carefully calculated modal cluster, and thus we never descend into anarchic atonality or chance music. As always, Hovhaness chooses his instrumental groupings and their motifs carefully, such that detail can be heard through the surface haze.

The work was composed partly in Lucerne Switzerland in July and August 1966 and partly while Hovhaness was composer-in-residence with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra the same year. Many Hovhaness traits of the 1960s can be found in this work. Long sections are drone-like whilst huge melodies unfold, and the listener in a hurry may tire of these harmonically and texturally static sections. There are frequent sudden shifts between instrumental groups, e.g. high strings with tuned percussion often cut-off brass and timpani. One recurring trait in this work is the tension between major and minor thirds, expressed both melodically and harmonically. Even in the texturally sparse melodic sections of the work, Hovhaness achieves highly original sonorities. Much of the work is in 7 meter, and the phonetic 'Al-an Hov-ha-ness' rhythm, three quarter notes (crotchets) plus two half-notes (minims) features prominently in a march-like section, later used on the Carl Sagan television series 'Cosmos'. The last third of the symphony is quiet and subdued, and the composer has compared the work's overall structure to the classical Japanese three-part form or 'Jo-ha-kyu', likening Vishnu to "Cosmic adoration, cosmic processional-dance, cosmic death and glorification".


"This may be Hovhaness's greatest work. It is surely his most thoroughgoing use of aleatoric quasi-improvisation in senza misura ... one of the great one-movement symphonies. An impressive statement, impossible to take lightly."

Timothy Virkkala, writer and editor

Unfortunately, this work almost achieved a 'cosmic death' at its premiere on June 2, 1967, which was also broadcast. Commissioned by the New York Philharmonic for its 1967 Promenade season at Philharmonic (now Avery Fisher) Hall, the conductor and Hovhaness 'champion' André Kostelanetz savagely cut sections out, and reordered the remaining ones. Instead of 30 minutes, the 'premiere' had lasted a mere 11. Feeling it was one of his best works, the composer was naturally very disappointed. Thankfully, he conducted a full recording of it for his own Poseidon Society record label in the early 1970s.

-I have taken the above notes (under the album photo) from hovhaness.com as I don't have time now
to really write my own. 

(I will add the Crystal Records notes written by AH sometime soon also)

Enjoy this astounding music!!

Hovhaness_Requiem_&_Resurrection_Symphony No.19_Part1-Tzadik.zip

http://www1.zippyshare.com/v/dIxgvrT6/file.html

Hovhaness_Requiem_&_Resurrection_Symphony No.19_Part2-Tzadik.zip

http://www32.zippyshare.com/v/v1oDn1ym/file.html

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Michael Hersch - String Quartet, "Images from a Closed Ward" - The Blair String Quartet - Innova/American Composers Forum - 2014

Michael Hersch is a young composer (currently 44, I believe) who I really knew nothing about until I read a review for this Innova album in Gramophone last year. It piqued my interest on many levels (I am after all a complete string-quartet-freak, whether it's Louis Spohr or Bartok or anything before or after!!), and in particular the inspiration of the subject matter, a series of dark pieces by the artist Michael Mazur depicting the anguish and extreme human suffering of patients within a psychiatric hospital in RI. I have always been fascinated with neuroscience, psychiatry, psychopharmacology (which, although we are in the 21st century, it's actually primitive; we are still but a hop, skip and a jump away from e.c.t. and lobotomies in many ways) and mental health/the resilience of those afflicted (be it composers such as Robert Schumann, Berlioz, Mahler, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, or the average anonymous person..)  Hersch's quartet is imo hauntingly beautiful, morose and manic, as it should be. There's plenty of spiky dissonance in this quartet yet it is approachable in the way that Bartok's great quartets are, and certainly more accessible than perhaps the darkest of (well-known) quartets, "Black Angels" by Crumb.  I think this is an important quartet and a powerful piece of art.


Michael Hersch's String Quartet, "Images from a Closed Ward", has in its origins an encounter in Rome in 2000. The American artist Michael Mazur (1935-2009) had created a series of etchings to accompany Robert Pinsky's new translation of Dante's Inferno, and Mazur's works were on display at the American Academy in Rome while the then 29 year old Hersch was there as a Rome Prize Fellow. During their time in the Eternal City, Hersch and Mazur seemed to recognize each other as kindred spirits.

The composer Michael Hersch
In 2003, Mazur provided artwork and commentary for Hersch's first CD release, a collection of his chamber music performed by the String Soloists of the Berlin Philharmonic. In describing the young composer's style, Mazur noted, "I am struck by what might constitute an analogy with painting and with my own work in particular. There is, of course, the overwhelming sense of 'sadness', which is better than 'doom'. In fact, the 'abyss' in its finality is easy to portray: a rich black says it all ... Dante looked into the abyss but primarily found sadness there. Sadness is a much more complicated and, therefore, interesting human condition".


Mazur began to make his name in the 1960s with two groups of etchings and lithographs, "Closed Ward" and "Locked Ward". His subject matter involved a different form of confinement than Dante's rings of hell, but his vivid depictions of inmates in a Rhode Island mental asylum peered into an abyss all its own. Reviewing the etchings in 1964 for The New York Times, John Canaday wrote that Mazur's tormented subjects "have the terrible anonymity of individuals who cannot be reached, whose ugly physical presence is only the symptom of a tragic spiritual isolation". It was these images that resonated with Hersch, and that helped to shape what would be his first string quartet since one composed during his student days almost twenty years earlier.


Once he had the work outlined in the summer of 2009, Hersch decided that he would contact the artist with whom he had not spoken in some time. Hersch recalls, "I was extremely excited at the prospect of seeing him again, and sharing the terrain of this new quartet. I felt that he would be surprised and pleased that something he had done had a hand in the shaping of this new work. The day before I planned to write him, I read of his death in a Sunday newspaper".


An etching from Mazur's Closed Ward series hangs directly over Hersch's writing desk in Pennsylvania. The etching depicts figures seated on a wide bench, back to back. In the foreground, a man is crumpled over with his hands nearly brushing his bare feet; his limbs are clearly outlined, but his head and torso are shaded to a deep, impenetrable black. The person next to him is a bundled sack 
of gray, the face distorted. Behind them are hooded figures and a ghostly partial image. There is a sooty, Dickensian objectivity to the scene, and yet the image is surreal and fragile, like a partially remembered dream.


"Images from a Closed Ward" uses thirteen separate movements to convey a disquieting reality from multiple vantage points. Music, unlike art, requires time to unfold, and Hersch stretches out the unveiling with glacially slow tempos. The work never creeps higher than 66 beats per minute (like a resting heart rate) and it drops to as low as 30 beats per minute, obscuring any sense of pulse. Another distinctive trait of the quartet is how, apart from the climactic counterpoint of the 11th
movement, the four players often work together in formations of massed sonorities. Although
distinctly modern, these homophonic or quasi-homophonic textures hearken back to Renaissance and earlier church traditions, a connection reinforced by open harmonies that avoid stylized triads and tonal expectations. 


Hersch's ancient, pre-tonal tendencies are most apparent in the pale chorale texture of the first movement, which functions as a prelude to the work as a whole. The players maintain rhythmic lockstep throughout the second and fourth movements, issuing loud and ferocious bursts of chattering chords. These two aggressive sections bookend the haunting third movement, marked with an expressive indication of "longing; quiet, restrained grief". The plucked
cello provides a dirge-like foundation for the understated and strangely heroic melodies. The fifth movement brings the first taste of brittle counterpoint. The sixth movement also divides the ensemble, with two pairs sparring in opposing strata of slow and fast motion. The seventh movement looks back to the smooth chords of the first movement, but the sound takes on greater urgency and motion, propelled by a ceaseless cello line. The eighth movement reduces the work's violent streak to dry attacks, the players assaulting their strings with the wooden bow-sticks. The ninth movement returns to the aching purity of long-tones, with a performance instruction of "haunted; stricken". The following movement, marked "frozen", drops the quartet into total stasis, a cold darkness reinforced by the use of mutes. From this point of maximal tension, the eleventh movement erupts with ferocious, unrelenting rage. Gone are the targeted jabs of the second and fourth movements, in which the instruments moved together. For almost ten minutes, the four voices engage in a battle of ripping, gouging, and stabbing counterpoint, followed by an arresting silence. The twelfth movement combines the worlds of the first and second movements, while the ending, thirteenth, section, reprises the wistful music of the third movement; the melody provides solace, but not relief, as it once again leaves the final phrase unresolved.



Mazur's final thoughts about Hersch's early chamber music seem to apply well to Images from a Closed Ward: "These compositions are filled sometimes with frightening sounds. They are unrelenting, nearly without hope. ... But no artwork can be without hope since it is in the very nature of creative work to be optimistic, if only in as much as we continue to work through everything but our own death".

Lastly here's an excerpt from the Gramophone review:

"Commissioned by the Blair String Quartet, who throw themselves into the recording as if not only their life but the composer's as well depended on the relentless intensity of every bar, Michael Hersch's Images From a Closed Ward demonstrates the extreme musical and emotional lengths to which a composer and a string quartet will go these days to maintain a serious relationship. Hersch's grim, graphic quartet responding to Michael Mazur's etchings and lithographs of inmates in a Rhode Island psychiatric hospital during the early 1960s lives a separate though equally haunted life from its visual inspiration ... Although the music's searing pain and endless despair, desperately trying to escape mortality - which erupts most violently in the 10-minute 11th movement - never really subside, a radiant core seems to emerge in the third of the music's 13 untitled movements. This core leads gradually over time to the possibilities of peace through release and consolation..."
































Enjoy

Michael_Hersch_Images_From_A_Closed_Ward-Tzadik.zip

http://www13.zippyshare.com/v/OzChzCsd/file.html

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Speaking of Music: Alan Hovhaness - Discussion, Interview and Musical Survey: SOM Series, 1989. Charles Amirkhanian - Alan Hovhaness, Piano & conductor (RPO) - Şahan Arzruni, Piano - William Winant, Percussion

It's one thing to be in love with a composer's music and genius. It's elevated to another (spectacular!) level to also have the opportunity to hear, in the composer's own words-what their music means to them, what it is that inspires, motivates, and so on...  Hearing Hovhaness's gentle voice, full of such warmth and honesty, is such a special experience and priveledge for me. Over the years I always assumed that I would have the opportunity to meet my musical idol, via a 'pilgrimage' to Seattle, Washington. I will always deeply regret that my daily life always got in the way, and that such a life-changing experience shall never take place. In the early 1990's Hovhaness's heath was already declining 
rapidly and then the century turned; six months later the musical world and indeed the global community lost one of it's greatest artistic forces, a unique creator of pure and simple beauty, a true spiritualist and a staunch believer in the common good of humanity. This recording allows us to experience the thoughts, parables and personality of Hovhaness first-hand; and as it's a closely mic'd ('miked' if you prefer) and intimate session, one feels as if they are practically in the audience :) 




Charles Amirkhanian interviews composer Alan Hovhaness for the San Francisco Exploratorium's "Speaking of Music" series, which was recorded on October 3rd, 1989. The American/Armenian master discusses the roots of his musical expression and demonstrates various techniques on the piano. His music is performed by New York pianist Şahan Arzruni, who brings unexcelled vigor to Hovhaness's early keyboard works and who himself poses some pertinent questions and introduces his evaluation and analysis. Arzruni is later joined by the great percussionist William Winant in a stirring rendition of selected movements from the rarely performed "Invocations to Vahaken".

Part 1

Midnight Bell (from "Five Visionary Landscapes, Op. 214") (1965) / Alan Hovhaness - Two Ghazals, Op. 36a/b (1963) / Alan Hovhaness - Khaldis, Op. 91 (excerpt) (1951) / Alan Hovhaness - Fra Angelico, Op. 220 (excerpt) (1967) / Alan Hovhaness

Here's what is discussed:

Two ghazals played by Hovhaness-Armenian heritage-collaboration with Maro Ajemian and John Cage-Invocations to Vahaken-Etchmiadzin-experimenting with percussion instruments-Carroll’s Music-Lousadzak-Tzaikerk-Merce Cunningham-working with Greek musicians for Works Progress Administration (WPA)-early influences from Greek, Armenian and Oriental music-Uday Shankar and Vishnu Das Shirali-friendships with painters-study with Leo Rich Lewis at Tufts-mysticism and becoming a Rosicrucian-Hyman Bloom, painter in Boston-Yenouk Der Hagopian-Gomidas Vardapet--Floating World-Kostelanetz-Dannoura-Dane Rudhyar-finding titles for compositions-d’Indy-compositional methods-sketch book-experience in Japan and playing Japanese instruments-piano techniques-European tradition v.s. Oriental music-Out of Silence-using world music-Khaldis Concerto-jhala technique-avoiding diminished 7th chords-(two short recorded selections from Khaldis)-European and Oriental use of fifths-"Fra Angelico" "aleatory" or "spirit murmur".

Şahan Arzruni, piano (Midnight Bell ; Ghazals)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (Fra Angelico)
Alan Hovhaness, conductor (Fra Angelico)


Part 2

Invocations to Vahaken, Op. 54 (1945) / Alan Hovhaness
Performers: Şahan Arzruni, piano
William Winant, percussion

Here's what is discussed:

Recorded selection from Fra Angelico-visionary painters-Arzruni's piano playing-(movements from "Invocations to Vahaken" played by Arzruni and Winant)-Hovhaness as organist in an Armenian church in Watertown, MA-Der Hagopian-Hovhaness's amateur orchestra-Arzruni’s perspectives of playing Hovhaness-Anahid-Boston Symphony percussionist-visit to Chicken Wing the medium-Arzruni's technique-Hovhaness's name change from Chakmakjian-living in Boston-destroying his unpublished works-Leslie Heward and the English connection-symphonic writing ("concertos for orchestras")-Arevakal-First Symphony-compositional form-visit to Armenia-Lake of Van Sonata-Khachaturian-Gomidas-(Arzruni plays "Erangi" from "Six Dances for Piano" by Gomidas).


*Both sections offer more discussion with Alan Hovhaness than music-which for any Hovhaness-phile will be nothing short of a tremendous pleasure! The musical segments are there and are quite enlightening, as well as superbly played-especially the solo piano works!


Alan Hovhaness Memorial plaque in Arlington, Mass., where Hovhaness attended the Arlington Highschool. The plaque quotes the young & eloquent Hovhaness from his yearbook entry from 1929. This memorial was constructed in May of 2009.

I hope everyone enjoys this rare opportunity to hear from the great man himself. I have a few other such interviews including a great (officially) released disc on Grenadilla with performances and discussions with AH, and featuring the clarinetist Lawrence Sobol among others..

Speaking_Of_Music-Alan_Hovhaness-Tzadik.zip

http://www69.zippyshare.com/v/E2JUYPFF/file.html