Pēteris VASKS (b.1946) 
 Concerto for Viola and String Orchestra (2014—15) [35:39]
 Dedicated to Maxim Rysanov. World Premičre Recording.
 Symphony for Strings ‘Voices’ (Balsis) (1991) [29:15]
 Sinfonietta Rīga/Maxim Rysanov (viola)
 Recorded in the presence of the composer
 rec. October 2018, St John’s Church, Rīga, Latvia. DDD.
 Reviewed as 24/96 download with pdf booklet from
    
        eclassical.com.
 BIS BIS-2443 SACD
    [65:44]
	
	BBC Radio3’s weekday morning 
	music programmes regularly include a quiet moment. This first
    recording of Pēteris Vasks’ viola concerto would make a fine choice for
    that slot. Scored for viola and strings, reflecting Vasks’ penchant for
    string sound as a double bass player, the solo is performed by its
    dedicatee and the whole programme was recorded in the presence of the
    composer. Excerpts from Maxim Rysanov’s first performance of the concerto
in Moscow are available on    YouTube.
 
    Vasks has long been one of my favourite contemporary composers. 
	I first got to know his music on an impluse buy of a Conifer recording of 
	his Cantabile, Cor anglais concerto, Message, Musica 
	dolorosa and Lauda (CDCF236, no longer available). His music
    shares approachability and strength with other Eastern Europeans such as Górecki,
    Rautavaara, Pärt and
        Ešenvalds, but with a distinctive voice of his own. Reviewing another recent BIS
    recording which includes his Lonely Angel, I wrote that it was
    hauntingly beautiful, though I had reservations about that album, from the
    Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, as a whole because the coupling is rather
    bizarre.
	No such complaints about the present coupling, which offers two of Vasks’ 
	strongest works.
 
    The concerto opens with a meditative and increasingly ardent andante
    that sets the ethereal tone, leading to a jaunty allegro moderato
    second movement, redolent of Eastern European folk music; the notes suggest
    that it’s quasi-folk, so I stopped trying to rack such brains as I have
    left to identify it. At times it almost sounds like Vaughan Williams’
allusions to folk music; throughout the work I was reminded of VW’s Flos Campi, Variants of Dives and Lazarus and the    Variations on a Theme of Thomas Tallis. Vasks has spoken of ‘chant’
    and ‘monologue’ in this work; in the opening movement, the viola is, as it
    were, singing to itself – the notes suggest that the theme is a
    conversation about our time.
 
    The second chant occurs in the third movement, alternating between hope and
despair, life and death, with a glancing reference to the funeral    Dies Irę. One might expect the adagio finale to mark the low
    point of despair, but the music moves in a non-linear way up to the light
    of a bright C-sharp major conclusion.
 
    We are hardly likely to have another recording of this deeply emotional
    work any time soon, but this must surely be the authoritative account.
 
    While this is the first recording of the concerto, the Symphony for Strings
    has been around before. As long ago as 1995 David Geringas and Jonas Aleska
    recorded it and the Cello Concerto with the Riga Philharmonic –
    
        review. That Conifer recording is now download only, comes without the booklet,
    and is rather expensive in lossless form (G010001716068R or
    G010000269960S). There’s also a Teldec recording, with the Violin Concerto,
    which appears still to be available from Amazon US.
 
    The symphony comes from a period of turmoil in the composer’s life, when
    the dying embers of the repressive Soviet Union were burning themselves out
    in the Baltic states – there were tanks in the streets as Vasks completed
    the first movement – and the composer was avowedly under the influence of
    the Polish avant-garde, especially Lutosławski. The three voices,
    which give the work its title, are those of silence, opening the work
    almost inaudibly, life and conscience; at the end the music returns to the
    silence of its beginning. The work also concludes on a note of optimism; on
    the day of the premiere in Finland the three Baltic states were able to
    assert their independence by flying their own flags.
 
    The music may be less ethereal, more searingly intense than the Viola
    Concerto, especially in the long central movement, where the forces of life
    often seem at odds with each other, as if many voices are trying to speak at 
	once, but it makes a good coupling for that
    work. Once again, with the composer present, the performance must be
regarded as authoritative. Don’t be put off by my mention of the Polish avant-garde; the work actually has more in common with Górecki’s    Symphony of Sorrowful Songs than with anything too way out. Rob
    Barnett, reviewing the Conifer CD, mentions Sibelius’ Sixth Symphony, not
    my favourite Sibelius, but I take his point. If the overall mood is one of
    sadness, with even the birdsong in the middle movement less ebullient than
    in Messiaen’s trade-mark music, the effect is not depressing.
 
    The BIS recording is exceptionally good, even by the high standards of
    their 24-bit downloads. If you hurry, you should be able to catch this from
    
        eclassical.com
    
    for the same price initially as 16-bit, $9.86. If you have missed that
    offer, it’s still worth paying the extra over the 16-bit. Like the SACD, it
    offers 5.0 surround sound for those who need it, as well as ‘ordinary’
    stereo.
	US$ purchasers will find the SACD currently on special offer from 
	ArkivMusic, too, as will UK£ purchasers from Presto. 
 
 The Conifer 
	recording to which I referred at the outset was released in the 
	USA by RCA.  I would very much like to see it reissued in some form; 
	the RCA Catalyst reissue has been deleted -
	
	review.  
	The Riga Philharmonic Orchestra under Krišs Rumanis give idiomatic 
	performances of some of Vasks’ typically ethereal music from the 1980s, 
	together with Cantabile from 1979.  Three of the works are for 
	his beloved form, the string orchestra.  Amazon US have a few copies of 
	the CD, but priced from $34.17 up to $73.53!  Amazon UK excell even 
	that, with a copy offered at £93!  BIS make amends in part 
	by including Musica dolorosa with the Violin Concerto and 
	Viatore -
	review.  I sense an overview of Vasks recordings coming up in a 
	future edition of my Second Thoughts and Short Reviews.
 
    To 
	return to our immediate concern, the new BIS recording offer some very striking music, in authoritative performances and excellently
    recorded. 
 
    Brian Wilson