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Samuel BARBER (1910-1981)
An American Romantic
Twelfth Night, Op. 42, No. 1 (1968) [3:56]
To be sung on the water, Op. 42, No. 2 (1968) [3:19]
The virgin martyrs, Op 8, No. 1 (1935) [4:16]
Let down the bars, O death Op. 8, No. 2 (1936) [2:17]
Reincarnations, Op. 16 (1937-1940) [10:56]
A stopwatch and an ordnance map, Op. 15 (1940) [6:24]
Sure on this shining night, Op. 13, No. 3 (c. 1968) [2:34]
Agnus Dei, Op. 11 (1938/1967) [8:55]
The Lovers, Op. 43 (1971) (version for chamber chorus and orchestra
(2011) by Robert Kyr (b. 1952))* [34:01]
Easter Chorale, Op. 40 (1965) (version for chamber chorus and
orchestra (2011) by Robert Kyr) [3:05]
*David Farwig (baritone)
Conspirare Company of Voices
*Chamber Orchestra/Craig Hella Johnson
rec. September 2011, Sauder Concert Hall, Goshen College, Indiana.
DSD
English texts and French and German translations included
HARMONIA MUNDI HMU 807522 [79:44]
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This SACD contains several arrangements of music by Barber and,
oddly, it’s the ones by the composer himself that I find
least successful. As I’ve commented before in these pages,
Barber’s vocal arrangement of his celebrated Adagio for
Strings as Agnus Dei doesn’t really work. One key
reason is that the tessitura sometimes stretches the voices,
especially the sopranos, uncomfortably. The members of Conspirare
are equal to its challenges but I prefer to hear the music in
either of its original string versions. Sure on this shining
night is my favourite Barber song and a great one. Indeed,
I’ll go further and say that it’s one of the great
art songs by any twentieth century composer. However I don’t
really like Barber’s arrangement of it for SATB choir.
It’s much better when sung by a single voice. Furthermore,
in the solo version Barber lets the piano have the last word;
in the choral version for some reason he decided also to involve
the singers at the end. However, if you don’t share my
reservations about these arrangements then be assured both performances
are excellent.
The other short vocal pieces also come off very well though
once or twice - in To be sung on the water, for
example - the words were not always ideally clear, even when
I was following the texts in the booklet. This seemed to be
more of an issue with the ladies’ voices and so it cropped
up again in The virgin martyrs, which is scored only
for female voices. However, that’s not a huge flaw when
set against some very good, well blended and fine-toned singing
overall.
The chief interest in this release lies in the arrangements
by Robert Kyr of two of Barber’s scores, arrangements
which were made for and at the request of Craig Hella Johnson
for Conspirare. One of these, Easter Chorale, is a fairly
short but nonetheless effective piece but the arrangement of
The Lovers involves a much more substantial work. The
Lovers is a late work and, as Robert Kyr comments in a note,
it derives from a difficult time in Barber’s life. Not
only was he trying to recover from the acute disappointment
of the failure of his opera Antony and Cleopatra but
also his long relationship with Giancarlo Menotti was deteriorating.
For The Lovers, which was commissioned for the Philadelphia
Orchestra, Barber turned to the poetry of the Chilean, Pablo
Neruda (1904-1973), choosing nine poems from Neruda’s
1924 collection Twenty Poems of Love and a Song of Despair.
These are set in an English translation by Christopher Logue
and W. S. Merwin. The Lovers is scored for baritone solo,
SATB choir and a substantial orchestra. Collectors may know
the work from the live recording made in 1991 by the late Andrew
Schenck with Dale Duesing and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
and Chorus (Koch International 37125-2) though I’m not
sure that recording is still available; I suspect it isn’t.
Obviously, Schenck used Barber’s original scoring.
In making his arrangement Robert Kyr has left the vocal parts
completely unaltered. However, he’s reduced the very full
orchestration substantially and his scoring calls for just 15
players - single wind, brass and strings plus percussion, harp
and piano/celesta. This arrangement works exceptionally well.
The choral forces are also reduced - there are some three dozen
singers in Conspirare, far fewer than the Chicago Symphony Chorus
musters - and the end result is a much more intimate piece with
far greater clarity in the textures. That serves Barber’s
music and Neruda’s sensual, not to say erotic, texts very
well. The Margaret Hillis-trained Chicago choir sings very well,
as you’d expect, but not only is theirs a much fuller
sound but also they seem to me more mature-sounding and the
fresher, leaner tone of the professional members of Conspirare
suits rather better the emotions expressed by the young Neruda.
Thus, for example, in the third poem, ‘In the hot depth
of this summer’, I find the Chicago ladies sing with rather
too much vibrato; as a result it’s not easy to pick out
the words.
The work calls for a baritone soloist, who sings three of the
poems. The soloist on this new recording, David Farwig, is a
member of Conspirare and he sings very well. He has a fairly
light voice and he sings with admirable clarity. His third solo,
‘Tonight I can write’ is particularly effective.
However, it has to be said that the greater experience of Dale
Duesing shows and though Farwig is by no means put in the shade
he’s not as characterful as Duesing. In the Chicago recording
Duesing is on particularly fine form in ‘Tonight I can
write’ and he has the benefit of the rich and expansive
Chicago Symphony to accompany him. Though in many ways I prefer
the tautness and clarity of the Kyr arrangement there are bound
to be trade-offs and there’s no denying, for example,
that the last number, ‘Cemetery of kisses’ is a
Big Statement in the Chicago performance and one misses the
rhetorical power in the slimmer scoring.
The Lovers is a considerable score and well worth hearing.
Robert Kyr’s arrangement doesn’t supplant the original
- such was not the intention - but the smaller forces required
may encourage more performances and I’m completely convinced
by it. In fact you could say that we now have two works for
the price of one!
Performances throughout the programme are exemplary, the recorded
sound is excellent - I listened in conventional CD format -
and the documentation, which is in English, French and German
is first class and beautifully laid out. This is an important
disc for all devotees of Samuel Barber’s music.
John Quinn
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