MusicWeb International One of the most grown-up review sites around 2023
Approaching 60,000 reviews
and more.. and still writing ...

Search MusicWeb Here Acte Prealable Polish CDs
 

Presto Music CD retailer
 
Founder: Len Mullenger                                    Editor in Chief:John Quinn             


Some items
to consider

new MWI
Current reviews

old MWI
pre-2023 reviews

paid for
advertisements

Acte Prealable Polish recordings

Forgotten Recordings
Forgotten Recordings
All Forgotten Records Reviews

TROUBADISC
Troubadisc Weinberg- TROCD01450

All Troubadisc reviews


FOGHORN Classics

Alexandra-Quartet
Brahms String Quartets

All Foghorn Reviews


All HDTT reviews


Songs to Harp from
the Old and New World


all Nimbus reviews



all tudor reviews


Follow us on Twitter


Editorial Board
MusicWeb International
Founding Editor
   
Rob Barnett
Editor in Chief
John Quinn
Contributing Editor
Ralph Moore
Webmaster
   David Barker
Postmaster
Jonathan Woolf
MusicWeb Founder
   Len Mullenger

REVIEW


Advertising on
Musicweb


Donate and keep us afloat

 

New Releases

Naxos Classical
All Naxos reviews

Hyperion recordings
All Hyperion reviews

Foghorn recordings
All Foghorn reviews

Troubadisc recordings
All Troubadisc reviews



all Bridge reviews


all cpo reviews

Divine Art recordings
Click to see New Releases
Get 10% off using code musicweb10
All Divine Art reviews


All Eloquence reviews

Lyrita recordings
All Lyrita Reviews

 

Wyastone New Releases
Obtain 10% discount

Subscribe to our free weekly review listing

 

 

alternatively
CD: AmazonUK AmazonUS

Liuto con forza
Bengt HAMBRÆUS (1928-2000)
Varianti per liuto solo (2000) [13:49]
Ivo NILSSON (b.1966)
Luta for theorbo (1999-2000) [9:25]
Erik PETERS (b.1970)
Pice for lute and live electronics (2010) [8:02]
Lars EKSTRÖM (b.1956)
Vision and Ashes for theorbo (1996) [12:18]
Ingvar KARKOFF (b.1958)
Four Pieces for lute (1985) [9:19]
Kent OLOFSSON (b.1962)
Chemin de Silence I-III for theorbo (2010) [9:58]
Peter Söderberg (6-course Renaissance lute, 8-course Renaissance lute, 11-course baroque lute, Theorbo)
rec. 21-23 October 2009 and 17-18 March 2010, Studio 12, Radiohuset, Gothenburg. DDD
PHONO SUECIA PSCD 186 [62:53]

Experience Classicsonline




Has anyone written a book on the fascinating phenomenon of twentieth century (and later) music written for ‘ancient’ instruments? If so, it has escaped me so far, but the field is certainly a very interesting one. The lute has had rather less ‘modern’ music written for it than the harpsichord has. There are relatively few significant modern works for the lute family; such examples as there are might include compositions by Mauricio Kagel, Howard Skempton, Stephen Dodgson, Sandor Kallos and a few others. Now here is an entire CD of newish works for the lute, all written between 1985 and 2010. Peter Söderberg was joined by Sven Åborg on an earlier CD, The Contemporary Lute – which contained music by Cage, Stockhausen, Reich and Ingvar Karkoff, not all of it written specifically for the instrument.

In the days of its greatest glory, the lute was an instrument endlessly praised by poets, almost exclusively in terms of its gentleness and sweetness of sound. For Richard Barnfield (1584) it produced a “sweet melodious sound”; for John Ashmore (1621) it had a “sweet warbling sound”. In a poem by Robert Lovelace, ‘Lute and Voice: A Dialogue’ (1659), the Voice implores the instrumentalist to

Touch [his] soft Lute, and in each gentle thread,
The Lyon and the Panther Captive lead”.

The lute’s power was a matter of magic and harmony, not ‘force’. To admirers and instrumentalists alike the notion of the lute being played “con forza” would have seemed a kind of paradox. Some of these pieces do require the player to push the instrument to the extreme of its dynamic range but there is a subtler sense in which this music involves liuto con forza – it is a matter of assertiveness, of a consciousness of holding the centre of the musical stage, of reclaiming a musical authority it hasn’t held for composers since the middle of the eighteenth century.

Peter Söderberg has always been an adventurous musician. He has appeared in more than a few jazz ensembles and as a guitarist (though his main attention has been given to the lute in recent years) he played plenty of contemporary repertoire. As a lutenist he has recorded the music of the renaissance and baroque but has also appeared on such genre-transcending albums as Trioloz by the Christer Bothen Trio. He is the ideal performer for the works on this present disc.

Varianti per Liuto solo was the very last piece written by that interesting figure Bengt Hambræus during his final illness. Using unorthodox (scordatura) tuning, Hambræus’ music includes some fierce climaxes which would have startled any Renaissance lutenist and would doubtless have been met with disapproval. But there are also some runs and phrases which might have elicited the admiration of a Dowland or a Francesco da Milano. The opening of Ivo Nilsson’s Luta for Theorbo takes us further back still, in that it echoes the sound of the oud, the lute’s ancestor, hinting at its middle-eastern origins. Nilsson’s use of microtonality creates a kind of bridge between those origins (at times one seems to hear the sound of the sitar) and some thoroughly contemporary idioms. Here the explorations of the instrument’s dynamic range – loud and soft – produce some particularly intriguing results. The Piece for Lute and Live Electronics by Erik Peters contains some moments of ethereal beauty, the electronics sometimes supporting and extending the notes of the lute, sometimes surrounding it with a halo of barely heard sound; at times the electronics become an almost equal partner in a musical dialogue. This is a piece that reveals new textures and relationships with repeated hearings.

Lars Ekström, in his Visions and Ashes for Theorbo quotes from Dowland (The Frog Galliard), but only as the starting point for some distinctively modern writing. The work is in three short movements, the last of them prompting thoughts of the baroque fantasia, more by its fluidity of mood and line than because it ever settles for mere pastiche. Apparently Ekström, Professor of Composition and Instrumentation at the Royal College of Music in Stockholm, has played the lute since his schooldays and the subtlety of his writing for the instrument evidences his longstanding familiarity with it. The Four Pieces for Lute by Ingvar Karkoff is for the baroque lute, rather than the renaissance instrument, doesn’t strike one as being so peculiarly well-fitted to the lute, and one misses Ekström’s intimate knowledge of the instrument’s possibilities. The programme closes with another work for theorbo – Kent Olofsson’s Chemin de Silence I-III. Here too there are echoes of the baroque – as Erik Wallrup points out in his booklet notes, “the first and last section have chord sequences than can be likened to passacaglia, while the second is more like a free toccata”. The music requires an instrument retuned in quarter-tones and with additional frets. Back in the late 1970s Olofsson played guitar with the progressive rock band Opus Est, for which he also wrote much of the music (two albums by the band can be heard on Spotify). He went on to study at the Malmö Academy of Music – where Olofsson himself now teaches. The adapted theorbo used in Chemin de Silence produces some deep, tick textures and some effects suggestive of a kind of poetic mystery and even of religious expectation. It is very striking music; like so much else on this disc it effects a remarkable extension of the tradition of the lute.

Glyn Pursglove




 

 

 



 


EXPLORE MUSICWEB INTERNATIONAL

Making a Donation to MusicWeb

Writing CD reviews for MWI

About MWI
Who we are, where we have come from and how we do it.

Site Map

How to find a review

How to find articles on MusicWeb
Listed in date order

Review Indexes
   By Label
      Select a label and all reviews are listed in Catalogue order
   By Masterwork
            Links from composer names (eg Sibelius) are to resource pages with links to the review indexes for the individual works as well as other resources.

Themed Review pages

Jazz reviews

 

Discographies
   Composer
      Composer surveys
   National
      Unique to MusicWeb -
a comprehensive listing of all LP and CD recordings of given works
.
Prepared by Michael Herman

The Collector’s Guide to Gramophone Company Record Labels 1898 - 1925
Howard Friedman

Book Reviews

Complete Books
We have a number of out of print complete books on-line

Interviews
With Composers, Conductors, Singers, Instumentalists and others
Includes those on the Seen and Heard site

Nostalgia

Nostalgia CD reviews

Records Of The Year
Each reviewer is given the opportunity to select the best of the releases

Monthly Best Buys
Recordings of the Month and Bargains of the Month

Comment
Arthur Butterworth Writes

An occasional column

Phil Scowcroft's Garlands
British Light Music articles

Classical blogs
A listing of Classical Music Blogs external to MusicWeb International

Reviewers Logs
What they have been listening to for pleasure

Announcements

 

Community
Bulletin Board

Give your opinions or seek answers

Reviewers
Past and present

Helpers invited!

Resources
How Did I Miss That?

Currently suspended but there are a lot there with sound clips


Composer Resources

British Composers

British Light Music Composers

Other composers

Film Music (Archive)
Film Music on the Web (Closed in December 2006)

Programme Notes
For concert organizers

External sites
British Music Society
The BBC Proms
Orchestra Sites
Recording Companies & Retailers
Online Music
Agents & Marketing
Publishers
Other links
Newsgroups
Web News sites etc

PotPourri
A pot-pourri of articles

MW Listening Room
MW Office

Advice to Windows Vista users  
Questionnaire    
Site History  
What they say about us
What we say about us!
Where to get help on the Internet
CD orders By Special Request
Graphics archive
Currency Converter
Dictionary
Magazines
Newsfeed  
Web Ring
Translation Service

Rules for potential reviewers :-)
Do Not Go Here!
April Fools






Untitled Document


Reviews from previous months
Join the mailing list and receive a hyperlinked weekly update on the discs reviewed. details
We welcome feedback on our reviews. Please use the Bulletin Board
Please paste in the first line of your comments the URL of the review to which you refer.