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Volume 24 Issue 6 - March 2019

Something Old, Something New! The Ide(a)s of March are Upon Us! Rob Harris's Rear View Mirror looks forward to a tonal revival; Tafelmusik expands their chronological envelope in two directions, Esprit makes wave after wave; Pax Christi's new oratorio by Barbara Croall catches the attention of our choral and new music columnists; and summer music education is our special focus, right when warm days are once again possible to imagine. All this and more in our March 2019 edition, available in flipthrough here, and on the stands starting Thursday Feb 28.

Something Old, Something New! The Ide(a)s of March are Upon Us! Rob Harris's Rear View Mirror looks forward to a tonal revival; Tafelmusik expands their chronological envelope in two directions, Esprit makes wave after wave; Pax Christi's new oratorio by Barbara Croall catches the attention of our choral and new music columnists; and summer music education is our special focus, right when warm days are once again possible to imagine. All this and more in our March 2019 edition, available in flipthrough here, and on the stands starting Thursday Feb 28.

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albeit not in the Schoenbergian manner) and the output of his two<br />

decades-long residency in France. Despite the long association<br />

with Stravinsky, Lourié’s piano writing does not involve the percussive<br />

aspects so prominent in that of his countryman. It is much<br />

more subdued and gentle, tinged by the Impressionist sensibilities<br />

so prominent in his adopted land. Nocturne, the work that Ernst<br />

performed here in Toronto, with its quiet left-hand clusters gradually<br />

building and then receding under the right-hand musings, is a prime<br />

example. Written in 1928, it is one of the last solo pieces Lourié would<br />

compose. Two short final solo works complete his piano oeuvre, the<br />

little Berceuse de la chevrette (1936) and the Phoenix Park Nocturne<br />

(1938), “to the memory of James Joyce.”<br />

An exception to the chronological order of the first two CDs, the<br />

third disc of the set concludes with a 1917 setting of an “absurdes<br />

dramolette” for piano and speaker entitled Der Irrtum der Frau<br />

Tod (Death’s Mistake), a half-hour-long monodrama by Velimir<br />

Chlébnikov. For this dramatic recitation Ernst is joined by Oskar<br />

Ansull. Although narrated in German, there is a full translation in the<br />

accompanying booklet. Ansull is also featured on CD2 in the peculiar<br />

Nash Marsh (Our <strong>March</strong>) from 1918 which is a strangely lilting<br />

“march” in 3 / 4 time.<br />

This collection is an important addition to the discography, and to<br />

the awareness of an innovative and once-influential composer whose<br />

legacy virtually disappeared after falling out of favour with the Soviet<br />

regime. Congratulations to Moritz Ernst for embracing lesser-known<br />

repertoire. His discography also includes music of Walter Braunfels,<br />

Viktor Ullmann, Norbert von Hannenheim and Sir Malcolm Arnold.<br />

Also Joseph Haydn! As Ernst explains in an interview with composer<br />

Moritz Eggert in the notes for <strong>Volume</strong> One of a projected 11CD edition<br />

of the complete solo piano works of Haydn (Perfect Noise PN 1701),<br />

the keyboard music of Haydn remains surprisingly under-recorded<br />

with the exception of a very few sonatas.<br />

Thanks also to Ernst for gracing a very appreciative audience at<br />

Gallery 345 with his insights and extraordinary skill.<br />

We invite submissions. CDs and comments should be sent<br />

to: DISCoveries, WholeNote Media Inc., The Centre for Social<br />

Innovation, 503 – 720 Bathurst St. Toronto ON M5S 2R4.<br />

David Olds, DISCoveries Editor<br />

discoveries@thewholenote.com<br />

STRINGS<br />

ATTACHED<br />

TERRY ROBBINS<br />

On Musicum Umbrarum, his debut solo<br />

album, the Canadian violist Pemi Paull<br />

presents five solo works that he feels show<br />

the interplay between past and present –<br />

“how the past speaks to the present and<br />

how the present responds.” (Metis Islands<br />

Records MI-008; metis-islands.com).<br />

George Enescu’s Menetrier is actually<br />

the opening movement of his Impressions<br />

d’enfance for violin and piano; adapted here<br />

by Paull, it provides a great start to the CD. The Two Wölfli Sketches<br />

– Horror Vacui and Musicum Umbrarum, from 2011 by the Canadian<br />

composer Scott Godin (b.1970), take their inspiration from works by<br />

the early 20th-century Swiss painter Adolf Wölfli, who spent much<br />

of his later years in psychiatric care and therapy. The brief Obrecht<br />

Motetten III, from 1980 by the English composer Michael Finnissy<br />

(b.1946), looks anew at the polyphony of the Flemish Renaissance<br />

composer Jacob Obrecht.<br />

The central work on the CD is the towering Sonata for Viola Solo<br />

by György Ligeti. A relatively late work from 1991-94 it has a fascinating<br />

and original construction: a first movement played entirely on<br />

the low C string; a second of frantic double stops; a third movement of<br />

torment and struggle; a muted perpetual motion fourth; a fifth mostly<br />

in parallel seconds and sevenths; and a Chaconne chromatique to<br />

finish. Paull meets every challenge with ease and authority.<br />

The final track is one that makes you look twice at the track listings<br />

to make sure you read it correctly – the Adagietto from Mahler’s Fifth<br />

Symphony, written as a love song to his then-new wife Alma. It’s an<br />

intriguing possibility, but the reality is even more intriguing, the piece<br />

being played entirely pizzicato as performed (and notated for Paull) by<br />

Ljova, the Russian violist Lev Zhurbin. It’s really quite beautiful, and a<br />

lovely ending to an outstanding debut CD.<br />

Links between past and present are central to another solo recital, as<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

Serenades and Sonatas<br />

for Flute and Harp<br />

Suzanne Shulman and<br />

Erica Goodman<br />

The substantial Naiades by Alwyn<br />

and Rota's Sonata are surrounded<br />

by pastoral serenades that<br />

showcase the magical combination<br />

of flute and harp.<br />

Before You<br />

Alicia Hansen<br />

Haunting and sophisticated, Alicia<br />

Hansen’s “ethereal voice and<br />

classically informed arrangements<br />

come together in experimental<br />

pop that’s both listenable and<br />

challenging” (NOW Magazine).<br />

www.aliciahansenmusic.com<br />

Musicum Umbrarum<br />

Pemi Paull<br />

One of Canada’s most singular<br />

artists presents his first solo album,<br />

a collection of uncompromising<br />

works for viola, including the<br />

monumental solo sonata by Ligeti.<br />

Inspired by Bach<br />

Movses Pogossian<br />

Powerful and intimate<br />

performances of solo violin<br />

compsitions by Kaija Saariaho,<br />

Gabriela Lena Frank, and Andrew<br />

McIntosh, inspired by JS Bach’s<br />

sonatas and partitas.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>March</strong> <strong>2019</strong> | 75

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