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			Peter SCHICKELE (b. 1953)
 A Year in the Catskills (2009) [21:33]
 Gardens (1968) [6:21]
 What Did You Do Today at Jeffrey’s House? (1988) [5:17]
 Dream Dances (1988) [12:14]
 Diversions (1963) [6:38] 
 
             
            Blair Woodwind Quintet (Jane Kirchner (flute); Jared Hauser (oboe); Cassandra Lee (clarinet); Cynthia Estill (bassoon); Leslie Norton (horn)); Felix Wang (cello); Melissa Rose (piano)
 
			rec. Ingram Hall, Blair School of Music, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 9-10 May, 2009; 20 November 2009 and 24 November 2009.
 
             
            NAXOS 8.559687    [52:03]  
			 
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                  It is a good and joyful thing to see a nice collection of Peter 
                  Schickele’s concert music. Not that he is unduly famous for 
                  his P.D.Q. Bach character, but as a composer of serious music 
                  he shines as one of the most original voices of his generation. 
                  Schickele has not invented a new wheel, rather he has managed 
                  to take traditional musical gestures and season them with his 
                  own invention with the skill of a master chef. This collection 
                  of chamber music, deftly rendered by members of the faculty 
                  of Vanderbilt’s Blair School of Music, is a showcase of the 
                  composer’s unique wit and creativity.  
                   
                  Commissioned by the Blair Quintet, A Year in the Catskills 
                  was brand new at the time of this recording. It is a picturesque 
                  work; full of the kind of interesting twists of melody that 
                  make Schickele’s music so fascinating. He is prone to shifting 
                  one or two notes in a tune by a semitone here or a semitone 
                  there to make what could sound quite ordinary into something 
                  that is unique and quirky.  
                   
                  The brief triptych Gardens, for oboe and piano is a study 
                  in colors. One of Schickele’s outstanding features is his ability 
                  to say so much in a very short time. I wouldn’t call him a miniaturist, 
                  but he can get his point across with little fuss. Such are these 
                  elegant little pieces that depict a garden at the three parts 
                  of the day. Jared Hauser plays with a sweet unforced tone, and 
                  is sensitively accompanied by pianist Melissa Rose.  
                   
                  What Did You Do Today at Jeffrey’s House? is a bit of 
                  nostalgia based on memories of the composer’s playtime with 
                  a childhood friend. These are whimsical pieces, pulling from 
                  a number of styles including a rollicking boogie-woogie ending. 
                  Scored for horn and piano, Leslie Norton and Melissa Rose find 
                  all the charm of these brief episodes. I can’t say that I was 
                  completely in love with the pieces themselves, as they came 
                  across to these ears as a bit contrived.  
                   
                  The outstanding work in this recital is the lovely set of Dream 
                  Dances. Scored for flute, oboe and cello, Schickele combines 
                  the old and the new by creating a suite that is reminiscent 
                  of a Baroque partita, but just for fun he throws in the semi-modern 
                  by replacing the Courrant with a Jitterbug and the Allemande 
                  with a Waltz. It is pretty much genius really, and Jane Kirschner, 
                  Jared Hauser and Felix Wang deliver an elegant performance full 
                  of wit.  
                   
                  Diversions, scored for oboe, clarinet and bassoon are 
                  again whimsical, and depict three specific scenes, a hot bath, 
                  a billiard game, and a New York bar. Although I felt that the 
                  composer captured his scenes well, I can’t say that I was particularly 
                  moved by these little snapshots, in spite of their being very 
                  well played.  
                   
                  Peter Schickele is reported to be one of the most performed 
                  composers in America, and it is easy to see why. The term accessible 
                  gets too much airplay, but his music is almost always captivating, 
                  mainly due to his double ability to color within the lines while 
                  choosing shades that don’t come from just any box of crayons. 
                  A good listen.  
                   
                  Colorful, original, whimsical, and adventuresome, this collection 
                  of musical short stories from one of America’s most diverse 
                  composers has something to please every ear.    
                Kevin Sutton  
                  
                 
             
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