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             Erik LOTICHIUS (b.1929)  
              Symfonietta for Strings* [22:12]  
              Piano Concerto No. 2 for piano, strings and 3 saxophones [22:23] 
               
              Four Songs on native American Poetry for mezzo and orchestra (With 
              Rejoicing Mouth 4:34; The Arrival of the Whites 5:04; On the Death 
              of Atahualpa 4:31; Lord, Most Generous 2:58) [17:07]  
                
              Jo Vercruysse (violin) *; Eliane Rodrigues (piano)  
              Maria Liekens, Karla van Loo, Rudy Haemers (saxophones)  
              Michelle Mallinger (mezzo)  
              Prima La Musica/Dirk Vermeulen  
              rec. 6-8 July 2008, Sound Recording Centre Steurbaut. DDD  
                
              BRILLIANT CLASSICS 9158 [60:41]   
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             Erik LOTICHIUS (b.1929) 
             Vocal works:   
              CD 1: Songs, French chansons, ditties for mezzo, piano and alto 
              saxophone.  
                
              Hantzen Houwert (mezzo); Erik Lotichius (piano); Benny Laureyn (saxophone) 
               
              rec. studio Crescendo, Genk.  
              CD 2: Hymns and French chansons for mezzo and piano.  
                
              Caren van Oijen (mezzo); Alessandro Misciasci (piano).  
              Titles of songs listed at end of review  
              rec. Bloomline Coryphee (producer/director Leo de Klerk), s'Gravendeel. 
               
              released 2001  
                
              Q DISC Q 97008 [61:04 + 48:21]  
             
              
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             Erik LOTICHIUS 
              (b.1929)  
              Chamber Music  
              Rebotko, for two flutes and piano [15:40]  
              Inez Lotichius (flute); Pauline Lotichius (piano), Lilian Lotichius 
              (piano)  
              String Quartet 1 [18:12]  
              String quartet 7 [13:16]  
                
              Zephyr Quartet.  
              Four pieces from Anaitalrax (15 pieces for piano).[12:26]  
              Ralph van Raat.(piano)  
              rec. 2001-02. released 2003  
                
              Q DISC Q97057 [59:54]   
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                  Erik Lotichius was first taught piano by his mother. He turned 
                  to violin and composition during his teens and continued his 
                  studies with piano, composition and music theory at the Amsterdam 
                  Conservatoire. There he became professor of counterpoint, harmony, 
                  ear-training and analysis, and later arranging. His receptive 
                  and accessible inclinations are very evidently not avant-garde 
                  and happily accommodate and synthesise jazz, popular styles 
                  and minimalism.  
                   
                  His prodigious worklist includes Eindhoven '44 (about 
                  the liberation of Eindhoven), Lyrisch Intermezzo (a day 
                  in the lives of Rossini, Wagner and Schubert), Variations 
                  on Mood Indigo for symphony orchestra, Hiphop - a 
                  burlesque for piano and (amateur) orchestra, Concerto giocoso 
                  for violin and string orchestra, Concerto for two double-basses 
                  and string orchestra, Concerto for two trumpets and youth orchestra 
                  (strings), 24 preludes and fugues for string quartet, three 
                  symphonies, a Requiem and Eline (1990) an opera 
                  for mezzo, two baritones and an instrumental ensemble. There 
                  are, at last count, some nine other stage works - operas, musical 
                  and entertainments. You can read more about his life and music 
                  at www.eriklotichius.be  
                   
                  He has also written Roos and Roos ontdekt de wereld - 
                  children's books about an English Sheepdog.  
                   
                  We turn to the Brilliant Classics disc (easily accessible) first. 
                   
                   
                  The Symfonietta is in five cleanly orchestrated brief 
                  movements and would make a nice companion to the Wirén Serenade. 
                  The Praeludium is imbued with a ripely brusque life-force 
                  around a challenging motif echoing Beethoven's 5th - the Fate 
                  motif. The Blues Fantasia transforms the motif further 
                  and is coupled with music lent a bluesy sway. This comes before 
                  a rattling and chattering Zuniga with just a touch of 
                  Spain about it. The Moorish caste to Jo Vercruysse's capriciously 
                  romantic violin solo shoots adoring glances back to Bruch and 
                  Sarasate. The insistently shivering steely-delicate finale is 
                  an emotionally drier affair.  
                   
                  The three movement Second Piano Concerto starts with a severe 
                  gesture from the strings contrasting with gently unassertive 
                  lightheartedness from the piano. The piano soon persuades the 
                  orchestra into the same mood which is further consolidated in 
                  honeyed intimacy from the choir of three saxophones. The romantic 
                  and nostalgic proclivities of these ideas remind me of Malcolm 
                  Arnold and Glazunov; the latter in his Saxophone Concerto. The 
                  pensive middle movement continues the theme. The final Poco 
                  Allegro ripples along giving urgent chase with something 
                  of the character of a tarantella but with those delectable saxophones 
                  again softening the ruthless mood Ultimately a sort of optimistic 
                  anxiety wins the day.  
                   
                  The Four Songs are in a populist sentimental style yet 
                  highly polished and capable. They have the shadows of the fashionable 
                  tango, of Gershwin and of French film music of the 1950s alternating 
                  and commingling over their pages. Mezzo Michelle Mallinger rises 
                  to the drama though the control-desk should have favoured her 
                  more against the orchestra. The final song leans on that brand 
                  of urgency angst and Philip Glass motor-rhythm that we hear 
                  in the Symfonietta. The words of the songs are printed 
                  in the booklet.  
                   
                  The Q disc 2 CD set of songs continues the trend but on a more 
                  intimate scale. The 25 songs on CD 1 are sung very stylishly 
                  by Hantzen Houwert. The words are English and Houwert's lightly 
                  accented voice suits their cabaret loucheness, jazzy pulse and 
                  tango smokiness to a tee. They are traced, touched off and caressed 
                  by the saxophone. All very entertaining, provocative and touching. 
                  Splendid and rather in the same mould as Elizabeth Montgomery's 
                  recitals with Richard Rodney Bennett, Cleo Laine's Shakespeare 
                  songs and Madeleine Dring's intelligent cabaret contributions? 
                  We also hear the native American Poetry songs heard on 
                  the Brilliant disc. These are all songs confidently migrating 
                  around the shadowlands between concert hall and popular sophistication. 
                  The second disc is packed with 20 lieder in a tonal pattern. 
                  Their roots are struck deep into nineteenth century lieder. 
                  Schoeck might be a parallel but these are more varied in mood 
                  being extruded and transformed through a late 20th century alembic. 
                  The chamber concert voice of Caren van Oijen suits the music 
                  in much the same way that Houwert fulfils the requisite qualities 
                  demanded by the lighter world of the more populist CD1.  
                   
                  The other volume - one disc this time - samples the Lotichius 
                  chamber music. Rebotko, for two flutes and piano is an 
                  urgently and sometimes slowly insistent, even obsessive and 
                  flighty, little melodic affair - very tuneful though the ideas 
                  do not go very far. Definitely affected by minimalism but then 
                  so is the First String Quartet which, across its four characterful 
                  and melodically direct yet by no means simplistic movements, 
                  also touches on the worlds of Weill and tango. The Anaitalrax 
                  pieces represent an exhibition of diverse styles culminating 
                  in Ragtime - all convincingly carried off. The three movement 
                  Seventh Quartet begins very strongly in a Glass-insistent hush 
                  of urgency with some Bruckner subsumed alongside Bernard Herrmann. 
                  Excellent performances throughout. This is music that is not 
                  hard to like. It will appeal on first hearing yet have enough 
                  fibre to draw you back.  
                   
                  We must hope to hear more especially Eline, the three 
                  symphonies, the complete Anaitalrax sequence, the Variations 
                  on Mood Indigo and the Hiphop burlesque. Though hardly the 
                  same this music should appeal to those who like Kapustin, Glass 
                  or Arnold.  
                
 Rob Barnett  
                   
                   
                 Contents of Vocal works - Q Disc set  
                  It really must be nice; Sondern ich werde sterben; Familiale; 
                  Chanson; Since you, sir went away; Poem in three parts; Und 
                  ich werde nicht mehr sehen; Makes me feel funny; Petite camusette; 
                  With rejoicing mouth; Dass von mir gereinigt werde; The day 
                  it rained; Mort; On the death of atahualpa; Weil ich eingebrochen 
                  bin; So many memories; Le meilleur moment des amours; Lord, 
                  most generous; Brüder, wenn ich bei euch wäre; I'm glad; Floris 
                  & stokstra; First man was the first to emerge; Erinnerung 
                  an die Marie; One of these days; Egidius, waer bestu bleven?; 
                  Come away death; Gegen ferführung; My down mood; O mistress 
                  mine; Intermezzo van de oude heer en het danseresje; Am grunde 
                  der Moldau; Music makes me think; Sigh no more, ladies; La luna 
                  asoma; Das lied vom freudenmädchen; A moon rising white; I like 
                  my body; Malagueña; Nummer één zei; Green, green; What lips 
                  my lips have kissed; La guitarra; Pour toi mon amour; Pure peace 
                  music  
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
               
             
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