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Light and Shadow: Modern Orchestral Works
Rain WORTHINGTON (b.1969)
+Tracing a Dream (2009) [8:17]
Rebecca OSWALD (b.1958)
Finding the Murray River [6:06]
Sleep, Child [4:56]
Adrienne ALBERT (b.1941)
Boundaries [5:40]
Interiors [6:54]
Tadd RUSSO (b.1976)
Family Voices [6:09]
Russ LOMBARDI
*Tonisadie [5:14]
Daniel PERTTU
Light and Shadow in the Yosemite Valley (2006-7) [8:48]
Moravian Philharmonic; *Plzen Philharmonic/Vit Micka; +Russian Philharmonic
Orchestra/Ovidiu Marinescu; Ohio State University Orchestra/Marshall
Haddock
rec. Olomouc, Czech Republic, April 2009 [Russo]; November, 2009
[Albert]; March 2010 [Oswald]; Moscow, March 2010 [Worthington];
Plzen, Czech Republic, June 2008 [Lombardi]; Ohio State University,
Columbus, June 2007 [Perttu]. DDD
NAVONA RECORDS NV 5847 [52:04]
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Navona Records - or, more accurately, PARMA, the parent company
- sometimes seem to have the oddest ideas about marketing. This
latest release ties a few of them together in the same package.
To begin with, the CD is lamentably short, and the six recording
venues and/or dates have given rise to an overall quality of
sound which at best can be described as variable. This is not
at all helped by orchestral playing that sometimes fails to
conceal the 'budget' nature of one or two of the ensembles.
Second, this seems to be a random collection of works by composers
connected by nothing more than the fact that they are American.
The title of the CD, "Light and Shadow", comes from
the best work on the disc, but seems to have no application
to the other works. Even the subtitle, "Modern Orchestral
Works", is a little misleading - the average length of
the eight works is only eight minutes, and most of the music
is on the lighter side of things. Navona do not help their cause
by providing relatively hit-and-miss information: biographies
are fine, but, apart from Tadd Russo, no birth dates are provided;
notes on works are all right, but no indication is given as
to when the works were written; production details are present,
but no information about the orchestras or conductors.
The booklet itself is 'virtual', having been digitised and put
on the CD-ROM section of the disc. Perhaps in the circles inhabited
by PARMA management everyone listens to music on PCs, but for
those still behind the times and using a hi-fi, the need for
a computer is a definite irritation. Why not put genuine extras
on the CD-ROM, and include a short booklet for those still stuck
in the past? The "extras" included here, besides biographies
and work descriptions, include computer desktop wallpaper and
ringtones and the complete scores to all the works on the disc
- though some are best viewed through a magnifying glass. The
disc case is made of card, with only the basic details printed
onto it.
The music itself, on the other hand, is likely to have broad
appeal. If it is a random collection, it is also an aromatic
potpourri. As already mentioned, the works are undemandingly
enjoyable, directly petitioning hearts rather than minds. But
they are more than fripperies, despite the best efforts of some
of the twee titles.
Rain Washington's Tracing a Dream is a straightforward
but interesting, dark-toned work, spoiled somewhat by the poor
quality of the recording, which sounds flat like an mp3 file
encoded at 160kbps. Sound improves somewhat back in Olomouc,
although the string playing is not especially good: Rebecca
Oswald's evocative, documentary-score-like Finding the Murray
River is "a metaphor alluding to the heart's desire"
taking the great Australian river as its starting point, and
ending with a cute epilogue. Sleep, Child is a lullaby of sorts
portraying the difficulties faced by mothers trying to comfort
their babies in times of war.
The string ensemble is better for Adrienne Albert's strings-only
Boundaries which is, mundanely and in a rather bizarre way,
based on a boundary dispute between her and her neighbours.
Given the subject matter, the music is hardly likely to be especially
affecting, but it is attractive enough, with bold jerky rhythms
in the middle sections. Interiors, reflections on childhood,
is also for string orchestra, and has a similar easy-going feel
to it.
Tadd Russo's Family Voices is a more inspired and powerful work
in two parts, written for a production of two Harold Pinter
plays. This moving piece has the distinct advantage of the best
sound and playing so far on the disc. Russ Lombardi's Tonisadie
is a lighthearted musical recollection of family walks through
woods with the dog; it benefits from the generally better musicianship
of the Plzen Philharmonic, and both this and, to a lesser degree,
Daniel Perttu's invigorating Light and Shadow in the Yosemite
Valley are also helped by the better sound away from Olomouc.
In fact, Perttu's Light and Shadow in the Yosemite Valley stands
out on this disc in terms of imagination and depth, although
the Ohio State University Orchestra under the memorably named
Marshall Haddock are not the best champions Perttu could have
had.
Nevertheless, it must be reiterated that sound quality on this
disc is not what it should be, especially not for a full-price
disc with other shortcomings. That is a pity for the composers,
because much of the music on this recording, while not exactly
trail-blazing, deserves to be heard again.
Byzantion
Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk
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