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Arlene SIERRA (b. 1970)
Cicada Shell, for chamber ensemble (2006) [14:47]
Birds and Insects – Book 1, for piano (2003-2007) [15:50]
Surrounded Ground, for sextet (2008) [12:49]
Two Neruda Odes, for soprano, cello and piano (2004) [10:54]
Colmena, for fourteen players (2008) [7:10]
Ballistae, for thirteen players (2001) [10:24]
Vassily Primakov (piano); Susan Narucki (soprano); Charles Neidich
(clarinet); Raman Ramakrishnan (cello); Stephen Gosling (piano);
Daedalus Quartet; International Contemporary Ensemble/Jayce Ogren
rec. no details given.
BRIDGE 9343 [72:30]
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Arlene Sierra is an American-born composer who has taught composition
at Cambridge University and is currently Senior Lecturer in
composition at the Cardiff University School of Music.
The earliest music on the disc is the last in playing order.
A ballista was an ancient Roman weapon of war, a kind of catapult
that hurled rocks over long distances. The composer writes in
the booklet as follows: “The circumstances, construction and
operation of ballistae shape all aspects of this work.” This,
it would seem, even in practical terms: the thirteen instruments
are separated into two groups of six, representing each arm
of the fearsome machine, “whilst the largest and heaviest instrument
(in effect the stone) is moved into its central place with considerable
effort.” More and more frequently I find myself wishing that
composers would refrain from explaining their work, and Arlene
Sierra goes further than most in this respect. Frustratingly,
the music needs no external props, for the work is a remarkable
achievement. From beginning to end the energy barely lets up,
a constant, battering stream of sound which nonetheless maintains
crystal-clear textures and an unwavering sense of forward motion
before arriving at the point when the projectile finally hits
its target … or perhaps not.
The Two Neruda Odes are settings, in Spanish, of poems
paying homage to everyday objects. It’s a pity the texts are
not provided, as I think Neruda’s originals, even in translation,
would come across as less worthy of Private Eye’s Pseuds’ Corner
than the composer’s presentations of them. The singer certainly
gets into a stew, which is puzzling since she is singing about,
first, a plate, and second, a table. But I mustn’t be flippant
– though it’s very tempting – because the music, once again,
is stunning. The vocal line is challenging for all concerned,
but superbly expressive and wide-ranging, and above all, truly
vocal. It is also magnificently integrated into the accompanying
instrumental texture.
Uncertain as to whether it’s a good idea, I leave the composer
to introduce Cicada Shell. The work belongs, she writes,
“to a series of pieces exploring principles of military strategy”,
and the impetus was provided by “an ancient collection of Chinese
battle tactics…‘Strategy 21: Slough off the cicada’s shell’
advises that false appearances mislead enemies. Transformation
and illusion are key to avoiding capture and defeat.” The first
movement, she tells us, is a series of crescendi, the second
a series of diminuendi. “Both movements feature a number of
ciphers based on the title of the work as well as a central
motif transcribed from the call of cicadas in nature.” So much
for the composer’s description of the music. Mine? Brilliantly
written, exciting, rapid, constantly moving for much of its
length. Reading afterwards that the music is in some way concerned
with battle one is not in the least surprised. Of cicadas I
heard not one.
The five pieces that make up Birds and Insects – Book 1
can, according to the composer, “be performed separately or
together in any order.” Thus we have “Sarus Crane”, “Cornish
Bantam”, “Cicada Sketch”, “Titmouse” and “Scarab”, of which
the final piece is longer than all the others put together.
The music is well conceived for the piano, spiky, percussive,
and exploiting all the instrument’s characteristics, though
not much the sustaining pedal. Perhaps because of the rather
monochrome nature of the music, I find it more difficult to
warm to this work than the others in the collection.
Surrounded Ground is another work with military connections,
and in the notes about this piece the composer nails a few extra-musical
colours to the mast. Writing favourably of her musical heritage,
she adds that “present-day American militarism and its consequences
for the world are another artistic challenge entirely. Surrounded
Ground is an attempt to address these issues in my own work.”
The opening movement is harsh, violent and unremitting. The
second, on the other hand, entitled “Feigned Retreat”, begins
with one of the few passages of slow music in this collection,
though reading the composer’s description, I’m not totally sure
that the cue has been placed at the right point. Between these
two is a highly combative and virtuoso passage featuring two
violins. The finale is hectic, constant, drivingly rhythmic
and sounds fiendishly difficult to play and get together.
Colmena is the shortest work on the disc. The title means
“Beehive” in Spanish, and the work “explores accumulation and
change from micro to macro levels”. Composed following study
of the nature of beehives, it is a superb scherzo for chamber
ensemble, the music hugely colourful and brilliantly conceived
for the forces. It never lets up, and even the closing section,
“a kind of buzzing repose” inspired by the idea of the beehive
hibernating, is only calm in comparison with what has gone before.
This disc is no easy ride. The musical language is highly dissonant
and challenging, and those moments to which one could apply
the word “lyrical” are rare indeed. It is brilliantly written,
however, compellingly dramatic and exciting. The recording is
very vivid and close, at one with the repertoire, and the performances
are astonishingly virtuosic. It is billed as Volume 1, and I
will certainly be looking out for Volume 2, despite the composer’s
booklet notes which are, in my view, of limited use, perhaps
even irrelevant
.
William Hedley
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