I think it would be fair to say that Bo Holten has made
his name principally as a fine and versatile conductor, particularly of
choral music. Among his many achievements he founded the ensemble Ars Nova
in 1979 and conducted them until 1996. Between 1990 and 2005 he was principal
guest conductor of the BBC Singers. From 2008 until 2011 he was chief conductor
of the Flemish Radio Choir.
Several discs on which he has conducted music by other composers have been
received warmly in these pages, including recordings of music by
Nielsen,
Delius
and
Emil
Reesen. Though he has written a substantial amount of music himself,
including symphonies, concertos and operas, recordings of his own compositions
seem to have been infrequent, though I have come across one or two short
individual choral pieces by him (
review
review).
So it’s interesting to come across a disc devoted entirely to his
a
cappella choral music.
The
Römische Elegien is a setting of two of the twenty such poems
by Goethe; Holten has selected numbers 1 and 5. In the first the poet has
yet to meet his beloved and views the city of Rome as a dead place, empty
and gloomy. Holten’s highly charged music matches these sentiments. The
obbligato cello’s music is warmer; perhaps it represents the poet. In the
second poem the poet, represented by the baritone, has by now met his love
and the music is much more sensual. The cello represents the female while
the chorus provides a background. Unlike some other contemporary choral
works that I’ve heard which have included an obbligato instrument, I find
that the cello part makes a very positive contribution to this score. The
music is challenging but far from inaccessible.
Dominus regit me sets Psalm 23 in Latin. Here Holten’s vast experience
in early music is to the fore. He deploys intricate polyphony in the opening
pages but as the piece progresses the polyphony “funnels down” into homophony.
It’s an effective and approachable piece.
I’ve previously come across a choral arrangement of Mahler’s song
Ich
bin der Welt abhanden gekommen by Clytus Gottwald. I felt a certain
vindication when I read in the booklet that Bo Holten, who has conducted
that arrangement, was dissatisfied with it because, for one thing it lacks
a soloist to make sense of “Ich”; I made a similar point in
reviewing
a recording of the Gottwald arrangement a few months ago. Unfortunately,
in making his own arrangement, which involves a solo singer and unaccompanied
choir, Holten hasn’t answered my other objection which is that the vocal
line can’t stand out from the accompaniment – as it does in Mahler’s scoring
either for piano or orchestral accompaniment – when
everyone is
singing. Here the baritone soloist makes a pleasing sound but I find his
style too forthright and for all the skill of the singers, any sense of
fragility in the music – especially at the very end - is lost. Why can’t
people simply leave Mahler’s sublime song alone? I don’t feel that Holten’s
arrangement is any more appealing than Gottwald’s. This is not for me, I’m
afraid.
Infinitely more appealing are the
Cantigas d’amigo. These are five
medieval Portuguese love poems, in English translations, set for female
voices. The songs were originally composed for a girls’ choir and the selected
texts convey the innocence of young girls in love. Fresh, innocent textures
characterise all these settings, even when, as in the fourth song, the music
is slow and dreamy. These are most attractive songs and the only slight
criticism I would venture of this excellent performance is that at times,
especially in the first song, the words aren’t always clear.
Handel with Care (
Variations on Darwin) is nothing if
not ingenious. Holten was asked to write some variations on a theme from
Handel’s
Water Music to mark the 250
th anniversary of
the composer’s death in 2009. However, Holten, who is a devotee of Charles
Darwin, noted that 2009 was not only the bicentenary of Darwin’s birth but
also coincided with the 150
th anniversary of
The Origin of
Species. He hit on the clever idea of combining some words from Darwin’s
memoirs – chanted/recited by the male voices and altos – and some snippets
from
Messiah and
Rinaldo sung by the sopranos of the choir
and two soprano soloists. As I say, it’s clever and it may appeal to other
listeners rather more than it did to me. Perhaps part of the trouble is
that I don’t find that the two elements – the chanted Darwin words, in English,
and the Handelian fragments – actually work together.
Rota Veneris furnishes the English title for this album. In this
work Holten has once again drawn on his vast experience of music of the
past. In this case he’s apparently taken three anonymous fourteenth century
motets, given them different medieval words – on the theme of secular love
– and then elaborated the music with contemporary harmonic language. The
result is both ingenious and attractive. It did occur to me that, given
the playing time of the disc, our appreciation of Holten’s skill could have
been enhanced if the choir had first sung the original music on which he
based his composition. However,
Rota Veneris can still be admired
and enjoyed without that addition.
Though I have reservations about a couple of the pieces on this programme
most of the music is impressive. It’s original, inventive and shows a tremendous
affinity for choirs, as you’d expect given Bo Holten’s huge experience as
a choral conductor. The performances under the composer’s own direction
must surely be definitive. Certainly there need be no reservations on account
of the performance standards since the
Flemish Radio Choir here shows itself to be a highly accomplished and flexible
ensemble. The recorded sound is very good, showing the performances in the
best possible light and the well-produced booklet includes a very helpful
note. Bo Holten has done a lot to further the cause of other composers on
disc and it’s good that here he’s been given the opportunity to blow his
own trumpet.
John Quinn
Original, inventive choral music by Bo Holten in splendid performances.