This is one of the 
                first of the Milken Archive series of 
                discs of American Jewish music I’ve 
                encountered. It collates a trio of composers 
                whose aesthetic is very different and 
                whose histories represent different 
                sides of Jewish American experience. 
              
 
              
Aaron Avshalomov was 
                born in what is now eastern Siberia 
                in 1894 and his story was marked by 
                travel – first to study medicine in 
                Zurich, then to America and then back 
                to China, through which he’d earlier 
                passed en route for San Francisco. Librarian 
                and conductor in Shanghai he was imprisoned 
                during the Japanese occupation; he only 
                settled permanently in the United States 
                after the War, spending the last nineteen 
                or so years of his life there. His Second 
                Symphony was commissioned by Koussevitzky 
                but he failed to make much mark on the 
                populous American musical scene. 
              
 
              
His Four Biblical 
                Tableaux date from 1928 and occupy 
                an axis roughly adjacent to Rimsky-Korsakov 
                meets Bloch. The music is explicitly 
                Hebraic though his interest in Chinese 
                music makes itself manifest in the second 
                movement, Rebecca by the Well 
                in the shape of airy winds and percussion. 
                Evocative wind and string textured the 
                third tableaux impresses through its 
                detail and warmth - though the Processional 
                finale rather takes the easy way out 
                with its deliberately antique sonorities. 
                Still, this is both competently crafted 
                and sympathetically warm. 
              
 
              
Sheila Silver was born 
                in 1946 and is by a generation the youngest 
                of the trio of composers. Silver studied 
                at the University of California at Berkeley 
                in 1968 and has studied with Harold 
                Shapero, an admirable musician and composer, 
                as well as Arthur Berger and Seymour 
                Shifrin. She currently teaches, and 
                composes for a wide variety of media. 
                Shirat Sara was conceived whilst 
                she was living in Jerusalem but composed 
                back in America in 1984. It’s a three-movement 
                tone poem on a Biblical theme – Abraham’s 
                wife Sarah’s frustration at her inability 
                to conceive, and the subsequent birth 
                of her son Isaac in her old age. Basically 
                tonal and with great swathes of colour 
                and rhythmic bite there is plenty to 
                detain the ear - see-sawy strings, a 
                mysterioso element, and dark 
                lower strings that play against the 
                higher ones. The finale is the most 
                clearly Hebraic but also the most musically 
                challenging – ending in spare, quizzical 
                lines followed by final, resolutory 
                chords. The element of unease and tension, 
                of things questioned and then, seemingly, 
                resolved is a narrative thread that 
                runs through the tone poem. A rewarding 
                work - but one that sticks to its modernist 
                guns. 
              
 
              
Jan Meyerowitz was 
                born in 1915 and died a couple of years 
                before his Symphony Midrash Esther 
                was recorded, though it was written 
                in 1954. He was born in what was then 
                Breslau (now Wrocław in Poland) 
                in 1915 into what he believed was a 
                Christian family. He learnt the 
                truth at eighteen. By 1927 he was in 
                Berlin studying with Zemlinsky and later 
                with Respighi and Casella in Rome. He 
                emigrated to America in 1946 where he 
                pursued a successful career, writing 
                widely (including a number of operas). 
                Midrash Esther is another tone 
                poem that takes the Book of Esther and 
                the time of tribulation at the hands 
                of the Persian Empire. There are four 
                movements and the first, by some way 
                the shortest, is a slow movement full 
                of powerful tread and prophetic foreboding. 
                The second is suffused with fraught, 
                baleful brass, uneasy sinuous winds, 
                and a pretty much unrelenting sense 
                of tension and unease, which the third 
                movement, an adagio-cantabilissimo (!) 
                tries to disperse. The finale is a vibrant, 
                lusty celebration with an extensive 
                role for solo violin, brass and percussion 
                – in fact the whole orchestra responds 
                with colour and felicity, and though 
                the themes themselves are not especially 
                distinguished they certainly generate 
                a real drama. 
              
 
              
With the expectedly 
                fine profusion of notes and supporting 
                information this can safely be recommended 
                to inquisitive listeners. There’s a 
                great deal of variety, geographic, aesthetic, 
                temporal – and some splendid performances 
                to boot. 
              
 
              
              
Jonathan Woolf 
              
see also review 
                by Colin Clarke