Tüür, Vasks, Sumera, Narbutaitė - Lighthouse, Musica Adventus & Other Works
Contemporary Classical | 2000 | 74'33" | EAC (APE, CUE, LOG) | Booklet+Covers | 310 MB
Contemporary Classical | 2000 | 74'33" | EAC (APE, CUE, LOG) | Booklet+Covers | 310 MB
Ostrobothnian Chamber Orchestra, Juha Kangas (conductor)
Hans Keller once defined the symphony as 'the large-scale integration of contrasts'. Like Stravinsky's Symphonies of Wind Instruments, Symphone, by Lepo Sumera, who died in June, evokes the Greek 'sounding together' rather than traditional European symphonism, which is just as well because there is no integration, large-scale or otherwise, in its mosaic-like structure. Neither is conventional symphonism a notable feature of Onute Narbutaite's Symphony with Triangles, a complex mirror-fantasia for strings in which a few triangles provide a splash or two of colour (the title is a gimmick). The work does, however, satisfy Keller's dictum, taking contrasting musical material then fragmenting and mixing it together, albeit not exactly organically. Unwinding from its central point, the coda affords a new vista, an innovative take on the standard symphony's final big tune. According to Tuur, his Lighthouse (an allusion to Stravinsky's comment that certain composers had had a lighthouse-like influence down the ages) 'communicates with Bach's era in a rather abstract way'. If there is more juxtaposition than integration of its neo-baroque aspects within the generally minimalist idiom, the music does develop where Sumera's is static. Lighthouse is an odd choice for the title-track, seeming like an exercise in poster paints next to the impressive canvases of Narbutaite's Sinfonia or Vasks's Musica adventus. The latter is the 1996 orchestral arrangement of his Third String Quartet of the previous year. Even more than the original, Musica adventus has a Shostakovichian intensity and the gravitas of a true chamber symphony, especially in this searing performance. The Ostrobothnians are on top form throughout, beautifully recorded in crystal-clear sound. An intriguing collection.
Onutė Narbutaitė is one of the rather few contemporary composers, whose music bears a mark of extraordinary individuality and remains recognisable from the very first bars of each composition. Like many compositions created by the generation of Lithuanian 'neo-romanticist' composers, the composer's early opuses abounded in images of 'night', 'silence', 'oblivion', unhurried flow, transparent textures and nostalgic moods. However, from the outset Narbutaitė's music was noted for certain features that distinguished her from contemporary fellow composers. Along with a wide range of various states, moods and emotions, Narbutaitė's entire work is noted for a sense of aristocratic measure and strong compositional discipline, which only enhances the emotional impact of her music. The rationality of composition here is expressed by meticulously detailed textures, exact proportions of smaller and larger sections and the overall form, and understated interplay of minute details. The abstract musical narrative is extremely expressive, prominent and often reminiscent of 'something familiar'.
Sumera: Symphone for strings and percussion
Vasks: Musica adventus
Narbutaitė: Sinfonia col triangolo
Tüür: Lighthouse
1. Symphone (1998) for strings and percussion
2. Musica adventus (1996) - I Moderato
3. Musica adventus (1996) - II Allegro energico
4. Musica adventus (1996) - III Adagio
5. Musica adventus (1996) - IV Moderato
6. Sinfonia col triangolo
7. Lighthouse (1997)