18.05.2022 Views

Volume 27 Issue 7 | May 20 - July 12, 2022

Schafer at Soundstreams; "Dixon Road" at High Park, Skydancers at Harbourfront; Music and art at the Wychwood Barns; PODIUM in town; festival season at hand; Listening Room at your fingertips; and listings galore.

Schafer at Soundstreams; "Dixon Road" at High Park, Skydancers at Harbourfront; Music and art at the Wychwood Barns; PODIUM in town; festival season at hand; Listening Room at your fingertips; and listings galore.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

well, with its range of colours and a degree<br />

of masculinity. Watson’s voice is dark and<br />

expressive, adding a layer of intensity to the<br />

words. The piano, having an equal role to the<br />

voice, paints the winter imagery of the harsh<br />

natural elements such as storms and wind,<br />

and McMahon does it exuberantly. On the<br />

other hand, he parallels the emotional unrest<br />

expressed in the voice with a wonderful<br />

restraint.<br />

Not for the faint of heart, this album is a<br />

heartfelt addition to the music libraries of<br />

contemplative listeners.<br />

Ivana Popovic<br />

Amour et Fantaisie – Melodies de Lionel<br />

Daunais<br />

Dominique Côté; Esther Gonthier<br />

ATMA ACD2 2839 (atmaclassique.com/en)<br />

! Canadian baritone<br />

Dominique<br />

Côté is world<br />

renowned for his<br />

opera and concert<br />

performances. Here<br />

Côté demonstrates<br />

his talented musicianship<br />

by singing<br />

his favourite songs<br />

by multi-talented Quebecer Lionel Daunais<br />

(1901-1982). Côté’s illustrious singing is<br />

accompanied with passion by Quebec pianist<br />

Esther Gonthier.<br />

Daunais’ popular, accessible songs are as<br />

wide-ranging as his career as a composer,<br />

singer/songwriter, performer, author, artistic<br />

director and radio host. Daunais sets his<br />

own lyrics brilliantly. Highlights include the<br />

opening track L’amour de moi with slightly<br />

atonal short piano intro, low-range-touching<br />

vocals, faster mid-section and “très” dramatic<br />

build to piano flourish and held note vocal<br />

closing. Four humourous Folklore songs<br />

include folksy, happy À Montréal, a city<br />

tribute with rhythms, a slower alternating<br />

section and entertaining spelling out of the<br />

letters Montréal closing. What Montreal food<br />

to eat drives Les patates, with operatic rhythmical<br />

lyrics mentioning potatoes, chips and<br />

even a federal election! Famous La tourtière is<br />

about its flavourful wonders, highlighted by<br />

back-and-forth answering of Côté’s clear lead<br />

vocals by Ensemble Vocal Charlevoix, under<br />

musical director Julie Desmeules. Daunais’<br />

songs with texts by writers including Paul<br />

Fort, Paul Eluard and Éloi De Grandmont are<br />

equally entertaining.<br />

Côté writes in his liner notes, “his music<br />

speaks to me and moves me,” which comes<br />

across in his Daunais homage, understandable<br />

even with my working knowledge of<br />

French. He loves these songs, and so should<br />

listeners!<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

Lux Aeterna – Choral works by György<br />

Ligeti and Zoltán Kodály<br />

Danish National Vocal Ensemble; Marcus<br />

Creed<br />

Our Recordings 6.2<strong>20</strong>676 (naxosdirect.<br />

com/search/62<strong>20</strong>676)<br />

! At first glance,<br />

the pairing of<br />

Kodály and Ligeti<br />

might seem strange,<br />

given the disparate<br />

nature of their<br />

musical works.<br />

While Kodály<br />

composed in a<br />

largely conventional yet extended tonal idiom,<br />

Ligeti is a renowned master of the avantgarde,<br />

famous for his introduction of micropolyphony<br />

and the use of his atmospheric<br />

music in the films of Stanley Kubrick. Despite<br />

this musical disconnect, both composers<br />

share close personal connections, including<br />

their Hungarian nationality. Four decades<br />

older than Ligeti, Kodály appointed his<br />

younger countryman as a teacher of theory<br />

and counterpoint at the Liszt Academy<br />

in Budapest before Soviet troops entered<br />

Hungary in 1956 and Ligeti fled to Vienna.<br />

One of the fundamental elements underpinning<br />

this disc is the importance of folk<br />

music in Hungarian musical traditions, which<br />

was the basis of their institutional training<br />

methodologies. Indeed, it was Kodály’s study<br />

and use of folksong in his compositions,<br />

which formed a new basis for musical life<br />

in Hungary. It is no surprise, then, to find<br />

that much of the material on Lux Aeterna is<br />

arrangements and adaptations of folk songs.<br />

While Ligeti’s music is often synonymous<br />

with the avant-garde, many of his folk songs<br />

are surprisingly conventional, particularly the<br />

1955 collections written while he was still in<br />

Hungary. These songs pair exceedingly well<br />

with Kodály’s more traditional fare, while the<br />

inclusion of Lux Aeterna consists of the 1982<br />

Drei Phantasien nach Friedrich Hölderlin<br />

give listeners seeking the modernistic Ligeti<br />

repertoire something to look forward to.<br />

The Danish National Vocal Ensemble is in<br />

fine form on this disc, embracing and showcasing<br />

the extraordinary complexity of<br />

Ligeti’s modern works, the brilliant wordpainting<br />

of his earlier folk songs and the<br />

late-Romantic sumptuousness of Kodály’s<br />

musical settings.<br />

Matthew Whitfield<br />

Martins Vilums<br />

Latvian Radio Choir; Kaspars Putnins<br />

LMIC SKANI 131 (skani.lv)<br />

! The musical<br />

heritage of the<br />

Baltic countries is<br />

rich and unique,<br />

offering a wide<br />

range of composers<br />

and works which<br />

are unlike those of any other tradition. This<br />

disc features the music of Martins Vilums<br />

(b.1974), a Latvian composer and accordionist<br />

whose material is characterized by fascinating<br />

titles and rich textures, all expertly performed<br />

by the Latvian Radio Choir and their director<br />

Kaspar Putnins.<br />

Perhaps the most traditional piece on this<br />

disc is Vilums’ Lux Aeterna, inspired by<br />

the traditional requiem text and portrayed<br />

through a wide range of timbres and layers.<br />

The use of melodies resembling Gregorian<br />

chant and Eastern Orthodox psalmodic<br />

declamation which emerge through luminescent<br />

choral textures make this work immediately<br />

appealing, especially for those familiar<br />

with Ligeti’s setting of the same text.<br />

Other works range greatly in instrumentation<br />

and theme, from the Zoroastrian cosmological<br />

text On the conflict waged with the<br />

primeval ox which features extended vocal<br />

techniques including overtones and microintervals,<br />

to the expansive Aalomgon for<br />

percussion, trombone, horn and <strong>12</strong> voices.<br />

This latter piece is perhaps the most fascinating,<br />

a mini-oratorio over 30 minutes in<br />

length and comprised of a “libretto” of syllables,<br />

arranged in a particular system by<br />

the composer, intended to resemble words<br />

of demonic conjuring and godly cursing.<br />

Aalomgon is a dense yet utterly fascinating<br />

experience, and a unique sonic expression of<br />

deeply spiritual themes.<br />

If there is one word to best describe this<br />

disc, it may well be “abstract.” While Vilums’<br />

music can certainly be experienced without<br />

guidance, the composer’s words and insights<br />

are vital to achieving complete comprehension<br />

of many of these pieces. From the<br />

systemically syllabic Aalomgon to the overarching<br />

spirituality of Lux Aeterna and On<br />

the conflict waged with the primeval ox,<br />

there is much on this disc worthy of appreciation,<br />

not least of which is the monumental<br />

effort put forth by the Latvian Radio Choir.<br />

Matthew Whitfield<br />

Heidi Breyer – Amor Aeternus: A Requiem<br />

for the Common Man<br />

Various Artists<br />

Winterhall Records WRC006<br />

(heidibreyer.com)<br />

! Composer/<br />

pianist Heidi Breyer<br />

composed this tenmovement<br />

contemporary<br />

Requiem for<br />

chorus, vocal soloists,<br />

piano, strings,<br />

harp and horn over<br />

almost a decade. As<br />

Breyer writes, “Amor is a musical anthology<br />

of our times…” It is another musical pandemic<br />

project for the listener, this one recorded<br />

during the first year of COVID lockdowns.<br />

Sung in Latin, Breyer composes with<br />

moving vocal and instrumental combinations.<br />

Introit opens with low-pitched<br />

48 | <strong>May</strong> <strong>20</strong> - <strong>July</strong> <strong>12</strong>, <strong>20</strong>22 thewholenote.com

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!