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To the Point
Jennifer HIGDON (b.1962)
To the Point, for string orchestra (2004) [3:54]
Andrew RUDIN (b.1939)
*Canto di Ritorno - Concerto, for violin and small orchestra
(2004) [21:36]
Gunther SCHULLER (b.1925)
+Concerto da Camera (2002) [13:46]
Romeo CASCARINO (1922-2002)
Blades of Grass, for English horn and orchestra (1945) [8:48]
Jay REISE (b.1950)
**The River Within - Violin Concerto (2008) [25:35]
*Diane Monroe (violin); **Maria Bachmann (violin); Dorothy Freeman
(English horn)
Orchestra 2001/James Freeman; +Gunther Schuller
rec. Lang Concert Hall, Swarthmore College, Philadelphia, 27 January
2006 [Rudin - live]; 21 April 2002 [Schuller - live]; 20 September
2004 [Cascarino]; 12 April 2008 [Reise - live]. Trinity Center,
Philadelphia, 12 November 2005 [Higdon]. DDD
INNOVA 745 [73:09]
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According to Peter Dobrin, music critic of The Inquirer, the
Philadelphia-based Orchestra
2001 "occupies a place of such importance that a classical
music community without it seems unimaginable". That may
be overstating the case rather, given that there are surely
many music fans quite unfamiliar with the ensemble, but Orchestra
2001 - formed, curiously, in 1998 - has some very laudable goals,
being "dedicated to performing and promoting the music
of the 20th and 21st centuries, premiering new works, providing
a major focus for the best new music of our time, introducing
rarely performed older works, and reaching out to regional and
international audiences through recordings and tours."
Certainly the group's commitment to American contemporary music
is inspiring, with their website listing nearly a hundred world
premieres. As for recordings, this looks like the Orchestra's
tenth CD so far, with five dedicated solely to George Crumb's
music, including four volumes from Bridge Records' complete
edition - the latest of which was recently reviewed here.
Jennifer Higdon and Gunther Schuller are probably the most familiar
names in the programme. Philadelphia-based Higdon's Violin
Concerto won the Pulitzer Prize for music only last year,
and although she is not likely to win anything similar with
her diminutive To the Point, a movement from her Impressions
string quartet adapted for string orchestra, it is a sprightly,
polished piece that will find favour with audiences everywhere.
The title is a reference to paint brushes and Impressionist
painting, but there is nothing impressionistic about the jaunty
rhythms, though the frequent application of pizzicato may bring
artistic brush-strokes to mind in the pre-motivated.
Veteran Gunther Schuller's Second Concerto da Camera
is one of three live recordings. There are two contrasting sections,
the restrained, other-worldly musings and odd sounds of the
first half giving way to a more energetic second. By way of
experiment, Schuller reduced the string section and omitted
the usual clarinets, bassoons and horns from the score, giving
a slightly more tart and edgier feel to a work that provides
a arrestingly gnarled middle to Orchestra 2001's programme.
Romeo Cascarino's Blades of Grass, based on an anti-war
poem by Carl Sandburg, is from a different era. It has a kind
of modern outdoor film score grandeur about it. Cascarino was
a Philadelphian, but unfortunately died just as Orchestra 2001
decided it was high time they recorded the work. As the title
suggests, this is a gentle, slightly mournful work, the poignancy
intensified by the cor anglais, sweetly played by Dorothy Freeman.
She first performed the work at a concert in 1994, attended
and admired by Cascarino.
The two works for violin and orchestra provide the main meat
of the recording. Andrew Rudin and Jay Reise are not exactly
household names, but they are Vice-President and Secretary
of Orchestra 2001's board of directors respectively. If that
seems fishy, their works dispel any suggestion that their inclusion
on this disc was based on anything other than merit. Rudin's
single-movement Canto di Ritorno is an emotional, mildly
sombre affair, blending the rhapsodic with the meditative in
a universally attractive package. Diane Monroe gives an appealing,
heartfelt performance.
Jay Reise's three-movement The River Within is similar
in some ways, though uses a full orchestra for maximum effect,
and is more harmonically and rhythmically adventurous. Magnificently
played by Maria Bachmann, this is a high-quality, full-blooded
concerto in the tradition of the great mid-20th century virtuoso
works - and redolent, perhaps surprisingly, of Bartók, Prokofiev
or Shostakovich. The vigorous vivace finale brings the
disc to a marvellous conclusion.
Orchestra 2001 give of their best throughout, although the strings
sound rather dull and flat in Blades of Grass and in
Canto di Ritorno - possibly a recording issue. Sound
quality is good, though not uniformly so - perhaps to be expected
given the different recording conditions. There are a few low-key
'noises off' - a few conductorly hums in Canto di Ritorno,
for example - and the odd technical blemish, such as differently
placed microphones, but nothing to spoil the listener's enjoyment
or appreciation of the fine music. The CD booklet is impressively
informative and well laid out.
To those that complain that all 21st century music is tuneless,
aimless rubbish, this CD says: use your ears ...!
Byzantion
Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk
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