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			Leonardo BALADA (b.1933) 
Caprichos No 2 (2004) [15:09] 
Caprichos No 4 ‘Quasi Jazz’ (2007) [24:04]
 Caprichos No 3 ‘Homenaje a las Brigadas Internacionales’ (2005) [24:58]
 
             
            Andrés Cárdenes, violin (No 2), Jeffrey Turner, double bass (No 4)
 Pittsburgh Sinfonietta/Andrés Cárdenes (Nos 2,4), Lawrence Loh (No 3)
 
			rec. 27 September, 2009 (No 2), 16-27 May, 2008 (Nos 3-4), Kresge Recital Hall, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA (No 2), Alumni Concert Hall, Carnegie Mellon University (Nos 3-4)
 
             
            NAXOS 8.572176    [64:11]  
			 
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                  Years from now Leonardo Balada may well be remembered as one 
                  of the most interesting composers of our time. That will be 
                  in part because of his significant recorded legacy on Naxos, 
                  but mostly due to the simple fact that he is one of the first 
                  composers of our age to emerge from the corridors of theory 
                  and write naturally. At least, that’s Balada’s own explanation 
                  for his style, in the combative and clear booklet note, where 
                  he draws a contrast between a time when theorists and musicologists 
                  derived their ideas from pre-existing music, and the dawn of 
                  Schoenberg, who (Balada says) was the first composer to draw 
                  his style from the theory, rather than the other way around. 
                   
                   
                  Balada himself was once a member of the avant-garde, with such 
                  works as Guernica, but in recent decades has chosen to 
                  let musicologists try to label his music for themselves. He 
                  rejects the dichotomy between “abstract” and “folk-influenced” 
                  music, and asserts that every composer ought to simply have 
                  an individual style, which either works, or doesn’t. Listeners 
                  who know his concertos and symphonies from earlier Naxos releases 
                  will know that Leonardo Balada’s style does.  
                   
                  These Caprichos, or works for chamber orchestra, are as close 
                  as Balada gets to “folk-influenced” music. No 2 is a trio of 
                  sharply-cut takes on Latin dance rhythms, although these are 
                  often hard to recognize underneath the sarcastic film of what 
                  Balada calls “a free modernistic manner.” In some ways this 
                  is the driest of the three works, and Balada himself seems to 
                  think so, describing it only briefly in the booklet. The starring 
                  roles are for violinist Andrés Cárdenes and harpist Gretchen 
                  Van Hoesen, who gets some of the juiciest material in the outer 
                  movements. Is there a hint of the “Mexican Hat Dance” in the 
                  finale?  
                   
                  Capricho No 4, “Quasi Jazz,” is built around a virtuosic, tuneful 
                  double bass solo part straight out of classic jazz albums. The 
                  piano, clarinet and string accompanists are very skillfully 
                  deployed around the soloist, avoiding the problems inherent 
                  in choosing such a low-key instrument for the lead part. Listen, 
                  especially, to the spiritual second movement, with the double 
                  bass singing a sad number over motoric pizzicatos; that the 
                  third movement continues the same mood at greater length is 
                  a bit of a pity. Jeffrey Turner is the confident soloist with 
                  a deep affinity for this music.  
                   
                  Capricho No 3 is presented last on the disc and that makes sense, 
                  as it is - to me, at least - the most compelling work. Like 
                  the other two works, the influences of Balada’s avant-garde 
                  days and his gift for “spiking” tunes with emotional ambivalence 
                  are always evident, but without the claims to folk styles which 
                  do not always ring true. Moreover, the second movement (“In 
                  memoriam”) features a gorgeous, lyrical violin solo that really 
                  is quite moving. It might be the most simply-scored movement 
                  on the disc, and benefits from that. The last two movements 
                  are excellent, too, if very old-fashioned: a lament in the form 
                  of a softly eloquent Irish folk song sung by violin against 
                  a sophisticated - that is, “modern” - accompaniment and then 
                  a really rousing jota in which Balada really frees himself of 
                  his inhibitions.  
                   
                  The “Pittsburgh Sinfonietta” was explicitly formed to make this 
                  recording, out of members of the Pittsburgh Symphony and Chamber 
                  Orchestras, and Naxos has quite generously chosen to provide 
                  photos and biographies of every soloist performer - all players 
                  but the string orchestra. Andrés Cárdenes, the Pittsburgh Symphony’s 
                  fantastic concertmaster - you can hear his violin solo work 
                  in the Janowski/PentaTone Brahms Symphony No 1 - supplies confident, 
                  glittering violin playing and, in two of the Caprichos, the 
                  sure conducting of someone who knows and cares about the music. 
                  Lawrence Loh takes up the baton in the Third Capricho with no 
                  less satisfying results.  
                   
                  This might not be the best introduction to Balada’s music, since 
                  many of the symphonies are more serious and quite a few of the 
                  concertos are both highly accessible and dazzlingly written. 
                  My favorite Balada disc is probably still the concerto album 
                  conducted by José Serebrier, and my preference overall will 
                  still run toward Balada’s full-orchestra music, though I suspect 
                  he’d be a winner at string quartets. But those who know the 
                  composer well and appreciate his output will definitely enjoy 
                  this addition to Naxos’ continuing Balada series.  
                   
                  With every new disc, Leonardo Balada looks more and more like 
                  one of our most outstanding composers. Or is it that he looks 
                  more and more like one of my favorites? Either way, these Caprichos 
                  show that even his “folk” side is well worth hearing.  
                   
                  Brian Reinhart  
                See also review by Byzantion 
                    
                 
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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