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George
FLYNN (b. 1937) Trinity
CD 1 Kanal (1976) [48:01] Wound (1968) [26:15]
CD 2 Salvage (1993) [39:29]
Frederik Ullén (piano)
rec. July 2004, Nybrokajen 11 (the former Academy of Music), Stockholm, Sweden BIS CD1593/94 [74:40
+ 39:29]
I had never heard of George Flynn before
encountering this remarkable release from BIS. The world of vast
piano works is a
small one, and just as I was about to
compare the scale of this work with some of Sorabji’s Opus
clavicembalisticum, it turns out that Geoffrey Madge, who
recorded this for BIS, has also championed Flynn’s work in performances
of his Derus Simples, just part of over 5 hours of music
this composer has written for solo piano. George Flynn is active
as an educationalist and concert promoter, having chaired Musicianship
and Composition at the DePaul University in Chicago for 25 years,
and continuing to direct DePaul’s professional contemporary
performance series, "New Music Depaul" as well as
Chicago’s "New Music at the Green Mill" series. Flynn
is also clearly no slouch at the piano himself, having recorded Trinity himself
on the Southport Records label. Unfortunately I do not have
this recording to hand for comparison, but I would imagine anyone
turned on by Fredrik Ullén’s utterly convincing performance
of this incredible work will want to hear the composer’s own
version as well.
Trinity consists of three individual works. Kanal means “sewer” in
Polish, and was inspired by Andrzej Wajda’s film of the same
name. Without being literally programmatic, the plot of the
work follows a similar course, in which partisans of the 1944
Warsaw uprising are forced into hiding in the sewers, and are
eventually annihilated by the Nazis. Wound is a musical
reaction to the Vietnam War. It consists of three progressively
longer sections of brutal intensity. Salvage, closes
the triptych as a structural partner to Kanal, in the
composer’s words, “the sonic shape of Trinity is formed
by two textural arches, (Kanal and Salvage) surrounding
three ‘spikes’ (Wound).” The final piece initially juxtaposes
the contrasts of violence and meditative music from the first
two works, but becomes increasingly serene, resolving with,
again in the composer’s words, “the bells of The Dry Salvages”,
a deliberate reference to one of T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets.
This potted summary of course does very little to describe what is
going on here. Apart from some sections of Salvage, in
which an element of romanticism and tonality is allowed to creep
in with a La Lugubre Gondola feel to some of the bass
repetitions, open fifths and the like, Trinity is uncompromisingly
modernistic in idiom. The piece is staggeringly difficult to
play, not only in terms of the technical pianistic demands,
but also in the sheer stamina required to complete its 115 minute
duration. One of the added bonuses on this release is a the
complete score to the work on pdf files on the second disc,
and following the notes on the page – if you can – will cause
you to doff your cap in the direction of Fredrik Ullén, who
never seems to put a foot or a finger wrong. Disc two also contains
MP3 files of all three works, ostensibly in case disc two doesn’t
play on your computer due to the extra data, but useful and
timesaving if, like me, you want to get to grips with some of
this music while doing the washing up or watching the snooker
on TV.
Those of you who know the piano work of Messiaen, combined with the
sheer time-span of works by someone like Sorabji might be able
to gain an inkling about the kind of music we’re dealing with
here, but in the Venn diagram of piano composition these worlds
collide rather than really overlapping. The music expresses
violence, anguish, fear and despair, but quite how is hard to
describe. A musical equivalent of Guernica? Possibly,
to the extent that both works communicate the universal imagery
and directness of human suffering and struggle in war and against
barbarism, while also both referring to real wars and events.
Analysis is difficult, and even Kenneth Derus’ excellent essay
on Kanal admits that the work has ‘no immediately apparent
local structure’ and that the ‘building blocks [of the piece]
are functionally ambiguous.’ This is not to say that the work
is not well organised, but the complexities go beyond the normal
references we normally use to describe musical form.
In the end, your struggling reviewer has, like
the composer striving to break through a writer’s block who
falls back on word-settings, had to resort to literary references
when attempting to communicate some of the impressions these
pieces create. A free interpretation of Italo Calvino’s ‘Six
Memos for the next Millennium’ sprang to mind while I was listening
to these pieces, as each heading seems, if not to peel away
one of the onion skin layers, then at least to allow a certain
amount of purchase, from which the peeling process might be
started.
Lightness:While Flynn’s work is anything but light
in the sense of ‘light music’, to me it seems to possess the
lightness of touch only a real expert at the keyboard can give
to his own compositions for piano. The technical demands are
great but, as Fredrik Ullén eloquently proves, not insurmountable,
and all are in the service of the expressive weight which the
composer wishes to communicate – it’s not extravagant pianism
for its own sake. Despite all of the doom-laden themes with
which this music deals, I cannot help sensing the exuberance
the composer feels in being able to create such tracts of inspired
musical expression, and as a result there is a way in which
these works levitate beyond the earthy bounds of convention
and expectation. Like some of the late Sonatas of Schubert,
Flynn seems other-worldly, even when dealing with violent and
tragic themes, and while maintaining an essential and valuable
humanism.
Quickness: For a work of this length, the intensity of
each moment is quite remarkable. At a basic level, much of the
music is very quick indeed. The sections of a more meditative
character are never over-drawn, and even in the extended adieu
towards the end of Salvage, have a constantly roaming,
searching, restless quality which prevents the music from becoming
static or dull. Exactitude: There are a number of passages which
have an improvisatory quality, but looking at the scores one
is struck by the detail and clarity with which even the most
complicated and dense passages are written. This contributes
to the qualities of quickness and lightness previously mentioned.
Even if the composer demands a mad roar of noise, that noise
claims a function, and Ullén is more than capable of expressing its emotional weight.
Visibility: This may require stretching a point,
but for those of us convinced that music always has some kind
of programmatic quality in the sense that it can conjure images
and sensations according to the associations already existing
within the listener – which, admittedly, may not be those of,
or even those suggested by the composer – this has to be one
of the richest of modern, essentially abstract and atonal piano
works in its power to generate such programmatic content.
Multiplicity: Calvino never finished this lecture,
so I will content myself with the generally accepted view that
his intention was to deal with the quality of consistency. Remarkably,
for a work completed over a 15 year time-span, each work has
a sense of ‘belonging’ to a whole. There are some moments in Salvage when
I found myself willing Flynn not to fall into easy romanticism.
He never quite does, but if there is a work which fits least
then it has to be the most recent one. This is not to deny its
qualities and its contribution to the whole, but its character
being that little bit ‘softer’ than the other two other works
it runs the risk of becoming an ‘odd man out’. This it avoids,
but when comparing the sheer granite mass and emotional assault
of the other works its romantic centre does give the listener
something of a let-off as a conclusion. When seen as a valedictory
apotheosis however there are no real artistic problems involved
in resolving the work in this way – Tchaikovsky’s 6th symphony,
but without the big tune.
BIS’s recorded sound is stunning for these works,
and on any level of performance and production I recommend this
release wholeheartedly. The only question remaining is, ‘will
I like it?’ This I cannot decide for you. It is most certainly
not a work for everyday listening, but neither would you particularly
want a life-size reproduction of Guernica on your living
room wall. There are sound samples on the BIS
website which
will give you some idea of what to expect. Taken as a whole,
this is one of those works which can have a serious impact on
the way you regard music for piano, or the way music functions
in general. If, like a few people I know, you think it sounds
like a bull bouncing around inside a piano shop and think Mr.
Flynn is taking us all for a ride, then I have to respect your
opinion and say that this is not for you. I happen to think
otherwise, and sincerely believe this piece to be an exceptional
achievement, and a powerful contribution to global culture.
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