Jacob Ter VELDHUIS (b. 1951)
    Complete Solo Piano Music
    Saudade (2012) [5:55]
    Klarsichtdise Mozartkugeln (2008) [1:03]
    Sound (2012) [1:06]
    Merry Xmas (1997) [6:05]
    Postnuclear Winterscenario No.1 (1991) [10:37]
    Where the Heart is (1996) [11:18]
    Toccata (1988) [12:06]
    Honky Tonk Blues (1999) [2:01]
    Views from a Dutch Train (1992) [10:23]*
    The Body of your Dreams (2003) [8:40]
    Off & On Situation Blues (1999) [1:53]
    Piano Concerto No. 2 ‘Sky Falling’ (2009) [18:29]**
    Pianoboek 1 (1979) [10:15]
    Pianoboek 2 (1986) [19:56]
    Intervallen (12 Studies for Piano) (1988) [12:32]
    Jeroen van Veen (piano), *with Sandra van Veen (piano)
    Ronald Brautigam (piano)**
    Netherlands Radio Chamber Philharmonic/Thierry Fischer**
    rec. 2010, 2012, 2013, Van Veen Productions (Studio 1) & Concertgebouw 
    Amsterdam (
Concerto).
    
BRILLIANT CLASSICS 94873 [71:13 + 61:18]
    
    
 Jacob Ter Velduis, widely known as Jacob TV, has been 
      called “the Andy Warhol of new music”, and with his reputation 
      for hard-hitting anti-war and anti-religious fundamentalist stances and 
      political commentaries, he is an artist to look out for. This release is 
      a collaborative effort with pianist Jeroen van Veen, who has been performing 
      Jacob’s music since 2001. His style can be said to be a mixture of 
      minimalism, jazz, classical and electronic sampling effects which can achieve 
      striking and memorable results.
       
      The gentle Saudade which opens CD 1 is however representative of 
      a number of more reflective pieces in this collection, described as expressing 
      “a deep emotional state of longing”. More animated is the little 
      Klarsichtdise Mozartkugeln written for a piano completion, and 
      with nowhere to hide in its transparency of line it is perfect for the purpose. 
      Sound takes the voice of John Cage, the piano tracing the rhythms 
      of a few brief and good humoured statements, the text of with is printed 
      in the booklet. Merry Xmas is a slow, sparse piece with little 
      in the way of commentary from the booklet, while Postnuclear Winterscenario 
      No.1 is more expectedly bleak. This is a piece which has taken on a 
      life of its own in various arrangements, but all with “the same mood 
      in common: speechlessness about war and devastation,” a speechlessness 
      which at times shares some affinity with the soundworlds of Morton Feldman.
       
      Where the Heart is introduces a “huge hammer” as part 
      of the equipment required, but this is only dropped on the floor at the 
      end of the work, so expectations of Mahlerian drama are dashed, with not 
      even the sound of the dropped tool to look forward to at the end. This is 
      however a good piece, with a grand build-up and some potent minimalist features. 
      Toccata is a superb work, responding to sounds of nature and exploring 
      resonance through increasingly intense pointillist activity, while Honky 
      Tonk Blues is a terrific funky workout. Views from a Dutch Train 
      also kicks off with groovy rhythms, the antiphony of two pianos adding an 
      exciting extra dimension and representing the variety and repetitions of 
      view between left and right windows.
       
      The Body of your Dreams introduces one of Jacob TV’s signature 
      techniques, following the rhythms and moods of voices edited onto tape. 
      In this case these are from a “cheesy advertisement for a weight-loss 
      product.” Think of something like Steve Reich’s Different 
      Trains, but with added drum effects and layering and treatment of the 
      voices, integrating them in different ways, adding humorous touches and 
      subtly treated rock-music aspects. The tight co-ordination between recorded 
      sounds and piano is of demonstration quality. Off & On Situation 
      Blues concludes CD 1 in a comparable but more compact way, in this 
      case using voice samples from “cocaine-addicted prostitutes who were 
      guests on a Jerry Springer show.”
       
      CD 2 brings us work with full orchestra, the Piano Concerto No. 2 ‘Sky 
      Falling’. The title is a metaphor for the uncertainties of life 
      today, from financial crises to war. It also describes Jacob’s response 
      to Ronald Brautigam’s performances of Mozart: “to me it was 
      as if the sky had opened.” The composer describes his use of the orchestra 
      as neo-classical, and the work is a mixture of Americanisms and features 
      which approach drama, but always undercut themselves through a kind of cinematic 
      bonhomie. This eclectic push-pull results in effective and highly approachable 
      music but a rather unusual concerto. We’re all for unusual here, and 
      this is a work with plenty of substance both overt and hidden.
       
      Pianoboek 1 and Pianoboek 2 are both rich sources of different 
      styles, from repetitive to romantically expressive, with some ‘new 
      objectivity’ in between. These are all fairly brief, though many generate 
      more interest than if they were merely piano studies. They would of course 
      easily fulfil this function for anyone seeking to explore beyond the usual 
      fare. The final work, Intervallen is subtitled ’12 studies 
      for piano based on 12 intervals’. These are miniatures in a similar 
      vein to Bartók’s Mikrokosmos and, aimed at amateur 
      pianists, are another useful resource with some nice musical twists to keep 
      any student interested.
       
      Supported by OxArt, a society with an interest in the arts as a communicative 
      language, this is a very fine production with Jeroen van Veen’s usual 
      high standard of performance and recording. Jacob TV’s music has a 
      Dutch flavour, but also manages to escape parochial greyness through its 
      breadth of influence and through its creator’s authenticity and unpretentious 
      directness. This is a collection which will reward anyone prepared to seek 
      it out.
       
      Dominy Clements