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              CD: MDT  | 
            Aaron COPLAND (1900-1990) 
               
              Quiet City (1939, adapted by Christopher Brellochs, 2007) [13:39] 
               
              Leo ORNSTEIN (1893-2002) 
               
              Ballade (1955) [3:59]  
              Robert ALDRIDGE (b.1954) 
               
              Sound Moves Blues (1999) [10:30]  
              Walter S. HARTLEY (b.1927) 
               
              Lyric Suite (1993) [8:42]  
              Lawson LUNDE (b.1935)  
              Sonata for soprano saxophone and piano (Alpine) Op.37 (1970) [8:47] 
               
              Seymour BARAB (b.1921)  
              Suite for trumpet, alto saxophone and piano (1996) [13:01]  
                
              Christopher Brellochs (saxophone) Paul Cohen (saxophone) Donald 
              Batchelder (trumpet) Mitchell Kriegel (clarinet and bass clarinet) 
              Richard Clarke (viola) Lois Anderson (piano) Allison Brewster Franzetti 
              (piano)  
              rec. July-August, 2010, Purchase College Performing Arts Center 
              Recital Hall; Oktaven Audio, Yonkers, NY; Lyric Suite rec. June 
              2005, Town Hall, NY  
                
              DORIAN SONO LUMINUS DSL-92135 [58:38]   
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                  A changing personnel of musicians has constructed an all-American 
                  programme of twentieth century music revolving around the saxophone. 
                  It’s usually for the alto - as in Copland’s Quiet 
                  City, Leo Ornstein’s Ballade, Robert Aldridge’s 
                  Sound Moves Blues, and Seymour Barb’s Suite - but 
                  one composer has designated the soprano and that’s Lawson 
                  Lunde. Two saxophonists share the burden, though Christopher 
                  Brellochs takes top billing, and Paul Cohen must make do with 
                  an under-spot, thus ‘…with Paul Cohen’, and 
                  smaller font size too.  
                     
                  Quiet City was an Irwin Shaw play that never made it 
                  to opening night. Copland wrote the instrumental music in 1939 
                  but then recycled some of it for the work of the same name for 
                  trumpet, cor anglais and string orchestra; he also used some 
                  in Our Town. What we have in this disc is a premiere 
                  recording of the unpublished score with intervention limited 
                  to the organisation of the material into a concert form. According 
                  to the helpful booklet note joint-authored by Brellochs and 
                  Cohen - it was the latter, in fact, who sent the score to Brellochs 
                  - there are some emendations to the score, involving moving 
                  melodies from the trumpet and removing the saxophonist doubling 
                  on the clarinet.  
                     
                  The piece lasts around thirteen and a half minutes, and is written 
                  for trumpet, clarinet and bass clarinet, alto saxophone and 
                  piano. It opens with edgy trumpet fanfares, and then soon dissolves 
                  into a rather beautiful melody with delicious harmonies, somewhat 
                  reminiscent of Appalachian Spring. Copland also throws 
                  in some quirky rhythmic motives and a waltz passage, as well 
                  as a lonesome solo line for the saxophone. This is a very welcome 
                  restoration, finely played. I hope it’s taken up by curious 
                  ensembles.  
                     
                  Ornstein’s pretty little Ballade (1955) for alto 
                  and piano flows charmingly with a quicker central section embedded. 
                  Robert Aldridge’s Sound Moves Blues dates from 
                  1999, and is crafted for clarinet, alto sax and piano - bar 
                  the Hartley piece, the hardworking pianist is Allison Brewster 
                  Franzetti. There’s a call-to-attention bluesy confidence 
                  to Aldridge’s writing, as the piano urges on the alto 
                  until the alto and clarinet riff over its rolling insinuating 
                  challenges. Walter Hartley’s Lyric Suite (1993) 
                  is for tenor sax, viola and piano and shows refined lyricism, 
                  and a good sense of contrast between the taut Nocturne 
                  and the fun Gigue. I can’t hear the Scherzino 
                  as ‘gritty’, as the notes suggest (it’s actually 
                  rather attractive), nor do I really hear any Bartók - 
                  maybe some Ravel. Lunde’s two-movement Sonata was originally 
                  only a one-movement piece written for flute. He expanded it 
                  for soprano sax and it’s tasteful, tuneful and has a breezy 
                  finale. Finally we have Seymour Barab’s Suite for trumpet, 
                  alto and piano. This has nice dialogues and exchanges, jaunty 
                  tunes, excellent dovetailing of themes and overlapping voices. 
                  It’s like a sort of vernacular Martinů in places, 
                  but without the motor rhythms.  
                     
                  Saxophonic Americana casts its net widely here. There’s 
                  nothing for avant-gardists, but if you like great tunes, bluesy 
                  excursions and limpid romanticism, then lend an ear.  
                     
                  Jonathan Woolf    
                 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
                 
                 
             
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