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All American
Kristen Plumley (soprano)
Ron Levy (piano)
New Jersey Wind Symphony/Christian Wilhjelm
rec. 2018, West Side Presbyterian Church, Ridgewood, USA PHOENIX USA PHCD185 [71:41]
Jeffrey Kaufman has done it again and into the bargain has laid about him,
swatting together a collection of crack pieces. They catch demonstration
standards and musical substance and in rowdy analytical sound.
Talk about wild and woolly. We certainly get that and more from the aggressive
and adrenalin-soaked Asphalt Cocktail by John Mackey.
It's like Grainger's Warriors in a car crash head
on with Michael
Daugherty'sMetropolis
Symphony. After this coruscating phantasmagoria comes the brooding
dignity and then whooping celebration of Howard Hanson's
Chorale and Alleluia. From the same generation comes Copland's
Quiet City. Roger Widicus (trumpet) and Mark J Donnellan (English
Horn) are assertively placed in a subtly shifting subdued and understated
soundscape. Jeffrey Kaufman's Court and Jester for
Piano and 23 Winds nicely encapsulates in sound the modest dignity of
some royal court and contrasts this with romantic spectacle. There's
little knockabout despite the reference to Jester. Kaufman mixes Ron Levy's
gawky piano into the wind orchestra's palette but the piano keeps
its eminence and sounds rather like the unruly Rhapsody for Piano and
Brass Band by Gordon Jacob or Malcolm Arnold's Concerto for Two
Pianos (both terribly underestimated works). It's a vibrantly romantic
work. Michael Valenti's Blood Red Roses
was written in 1970 as a prelude to a Broadway show called A Play
with Songs. It's a determined, jolly and jaunty piece. Then
come three show songs in eight minutes where the NJWS are joined by the
full-on, big hall, vibrant voice of Kristen Plumley. For these she adopts
a fully-wound operatic style rather than a Broadway theatrical voice.
She succumbs to some vibrato in the testingly slow Kiss Me Again
but is more comfortably at home in Embraceable You. The CD ends
with Gershwin's Second Rhapsody for Piano
and Orchestra - hardly the most commonly encountered piece even in
its orchestral dress-up. Here we are confronted with a pretty snappy and
exciting transcription for concert band and piano. It's snappily
and swooningly performed by the band and soloist. The nicely done re-instrumentation
is by James C Ripley.
Well recorded and performed, fully annotated and with a slam-dunk recording,
there's something for everyone in this All American collection.
Do have a riffle through Phoenix
USA's web-site. There are some surprising things there.
Rob Barnett Disc contents John MACKEY (b.1937)
Asphalt Cocktail [6:08] Howard HANSON (1896-1981)
Chorale and Alleluia [4:05] Aaron COPLAND (1900-1990)
Quiet City [10:06] Jeffrey KAUFMAN (b.1947)
Court and Jester [15:09] Michael VALENTI (b.1942)
Blood Red Roses [8:25] Alan Jay LERNER and Frederick LOWE
I Could Have Danced All Night [2:09] Victor HERBERT
Kiss Me Again [2:43] George GERSHWIN (1898-1932)
Embraceable You [3:20]; Second Rhapsody for Solo Piano and Wind Ensemble
[17:36]