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Volume 28 Issue 4 | February - March 2023

Volume 28 no.4, covering Feb, March and into early April '23! David Olds remembers composer John Beckwith; Andrew Timar reflects on the life and times of artistic polymath Michael Snow; Mezzo Emily Fons, in town for Figaro, on trouser roles, the life of a mezzo-soprano on the road and more; Colin Story on the Soft-Seat beat; tracks from 22 new recordings added to our Listening Room. All this and more.

Volume 28 no.4, covering Feb, March and into early April '23! David Olds remembers composer John Beckwith; Andrew Timar reflects on the life and times of artistic polymath Michael Snow; Mezzo Emily Fons, in town for Figaro, on trouser roles, the life of a mezzo-soprano on the road and more; Colin Story on the Soft-Seat beat; tracks from 22 new recordings added to our Listening Room. All this and more.

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Poul Ruders – Clarinet Quintet; Throne;<br />

Piano Quartet<br />

Rudersdal Chamber Players<br />

Our Recordings 8.220680<br />

(ourrecordings.com)<br />

! The Rudersdal<br />

Chamber Players<br />

lift the music of<br />

Poul Ruders off the<br />

page and into the<br />

ether with finesse<br />

and passion. Liner<br />

notes include<br />

Ruders’ own quirky<br />

accounting for the pieces, and players’ biographies,<br />

which one senses were written by<br />

themselves. The group has been together<br />

since 2017, with members mostly of the<br />

current generation, all excellent. No explanation<br />

is offered for the similarity of the names,<br />

so call it a coincidence. The group is named<br />

for a music festival whose home is Rudersdal.<br />

The music itself is intense and compelling.<br />

Three works fill out the roughly 60 minutes<br />

of track time: Throne for clarinet and piano<br />

(1988); and the more recent Clarinet Quintet<br />

(2014) and Piano Quartet (2016). Describing<br />

or categorizing Ruders’ music requires more<br />

space than allotted, so I decided to list some<br />

adjectives and some possible likenesses to<br />

other composers: swinging, soaring, wailing;<br />

sweet and then astringent; moody and meditative;<br />

then boisterous and exuberant.<br />

Sometimes in the style of a chorale,<br />

featuring monody or homophony, with<br />

minimal vibrato (the Adagio movement of<br />

the Clarinet Quintet). At others (especially in<br />

the Piano Quartet) he reverts to more boldly<br />

modern style in the sense that his usual<br />

tonalism gives way to expressionistic chromaticism.<br />

And especially in the playing of<br />

the terribly capable clarinetist Jonas Frøland,<br />

expect keening notes at the top of the spectrum<br />

to tug on your emotions.<br />

If he has forebears, they are Messiaen<br />

(although Ruders is doubtless a pantheist)<br />

and Ruders’ compatriot Carl Nielsen (minus<br />

the melancholy). His contemporary cadre<br />

might include Gavin Bryars and Anders<br />

Hillborg, and possibly Kaija Saariaho. In his<br />

own words, the most important defining<br />

feature of his music is its soul and I urge you<br />

to discover that for yourself.<br />

Max Christie<br />

Works for Violin and Percussion Orchestra<br />

Nicholas Kitchen; New England<br />

Conservatory Percussion Ensemble; Frank<br />

Epstein<br />

Naxos 8.574212 (naxos.com/Search/<br />

KeywordSearchResults/?q=Agocs)<br />

! American<br />

composer Lou<br />

Harrison (1912-<br />

2003) enjoyed<br />

mixing non-<br />

Western musical<br />

exoticism with<br />

lots of percussion.<br />

In his Arabicflavoured,<br />

21-minute Concerto for Violin and<br />

Percussion Orchestra, he augmented conventional<br />

noisemakers with novel “instruments”<br />

including flowerpots, metallic coils and washtubs.<br />

Sinuous violin melismas and pulsating<br />

percussion decorate its first two movements,<br />

composed in 1940; Harrison added the roisterous<br />

belly-dance finale in 1959. It’s energetically<br />

performed by Nicholas Kitchen, first<br />

violinist of the Borromeo String Quartet, New<br />

England Conservatory quartet-in-residence,<br />

and the NEC Percussion Ensemble conducted<br />

by Frank Epstein, its founding music director.<br />

Insistent rhythms and pentatonic<br />

melodies, including an ancient Mayan<br />

dance-song, evoke tropical steaminess in<br />

the five-movement Xochiquetzal (2014) by<br />

Robert Xavier Rodríguez (b. San Antonio,<br />

Texas 1946). Kitchen’s violin vividly represents<br />

Xochiquetzal, Aztec goddess of beauty,<br />

love and fertility, among hummingbirds,<br />

casting a love spell, alongside her raingod<br />

husband, weeping tears of flowers<br />

and bestowing music and dance upon her<br />

worshippers.<br />

The four-movement Concerto for Violin<br />

and Percussion Orchestra (2018) by NEC<br />

faculty member Kati Agócs (b. Windsor,<br />

Ontario 1975) begins with Incanta, gentle<br />

tinkles accompanying a long-lined, sentimental<br />

violin melody. In the animated<br />

Inquieto, staccato percussion punctuates<br />

rapid, repeated violin figurations. Maestoso<br />

presents another extended, soulful violin<br />

melody, slowly throbbing percussion, an<br />

intense violin cadenza leading to a dramatic<br />

tutti climax before returning to the opening<br />

lyricism. Brioso.Cantabile’s piquant melodies<br />

and propulsive rhythms create a whirlwind,<br />

Gypsy-like dance, its exultant final flourish<br />

ending both the concerto and this very entertaining<br />

CD.<br />

Michael Schulman<br />

Album for Astor<br />

Bjarke Mogensen; Danish Chamber Players<br />

Our Recordings 8.226916<br />

(ourrecordings.com)<br />

! Danish accordionist<br />

Bjarke<br />

Mogensen writes in<br />

his liner notes that<br />

this Astor Piazzolla<br />

instrumental release<br />

is for “the centenary<br />

of his birth.”<br />

Mogensen bases his<br />

accordion performances and instrumental<br />

arrangements here in his admiration, studies<br />

and understanding of Piazzolla’s compositions<br />

and bandoneon playing. Combined<br />

with Mogensen’s personal sound, this is over<br />

one hour of perfect Piazzolla.<br />

The attention-grabbing opening track is<br />

Mogensen’s accordion solo arrangement of<br />

Adiós Nonino, Piazzolla’s work composed in<br />

memory of his father. An accented fast beginning<br />

leads to the famous slow, sad, emotional<br />

melody with rubato, then back to faster lush full<br />

glissandos and colours, showing off Mogensen’s<br />

skillful musicality, fast technique and respectful<br />

interpretations. The closing track solo arrangement<br />

Despertar (cadenza) is calming.<br />

The other tracks feature ensembles.<br />

Mogensen arranges six works for himself<br />

and the Danish Chamber Players. Highlight<br />

is Fuga Y Misterio, from Piazzolla’s opera<br />

Maria de Buenos Aires. Contrapuntal writing<br />

with fast attention-grabbing accordion single<br />

lines, fugal instrumental lines, then full<br />

instrumentals with accented accordion and<br />

orchestra detached notes produce spirited<br />

dance sounds.<br />

Mathias Heise on harmonica joins<br />

Mogensen on their co-arrangement/duet<br />

of Café 1930 from Histoire du Tango. The<br />

harmonica blends surprisingly well with<br />

the accordion, especially in high-pitched<br />

lines above accordion bellow vibratos.<br />

Co-arranger Johan Bridger’s melodious virtuosic<br />

ringing vibraphone playing competes<br />

with and complements accordion tango runs<br />

in Vibraphonissimo. His vibes/percussion<br />

tight rendition with accordion moves from<br />

moody to tango nuevo in Tristango.<br />

Piazzolla’s music lives on in this clear<br />

recording.<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

Denis Plante – Suite Tango<br />

Stéphane Tétreault; Denis Plante<br />

ATMA ACD2 <strong>28</strong>81 (atmaclassique.com/en)<br />

! Bandoneonist/<br />

composer Denis<br />

Plante was inspired<br />

by J.S. Bach’s Cello<br />

Suites which feature<br />

such dances as<br />

courante, gigue<br />

and sarabande<br />

to compose Suite<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>February</strong> & <strong>March</strong>, <strong>2023</strong> | 61

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