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Manolis KALOMIRIS (1883–1962)
Triptych (1937/40) [22:16]
Symphony No.3 in D minor “Palamian” (1955)* [30:39]
Three Greek Dances (1934) [8:46]
The Destruction of Psará (1949?)* [1:34]
Nikitas Tsakiroglou (narrator)*
Athens State Orchestra/Byron Fidetzis
rec. Athens Concert Hall Recording Centre, June-July 2005 NAXOS 8.557970 [63:15]
Manolis Kalomiris is generally – and
rightly – regarded as the Father of Modern Greek Music. He
composed a sizeable and varied output including five operas
(1915-1961), three symphonies, concertos, orchestral works,
songs and orchestral songs, of which very little is actually
known outside Greece. This despite quite a number of his
works having been issued in commercial recordings, but these
do not seem to be readily available, which makes this release
most welcome.
The Triptych
for Orchestra was written in homage to the Greek
statesman Eleftheros Venizelos who died in March 1936.
The first panel opens with a virile, powerfully declamatory,
aspiring theme. The music, however, has its more lyrical
sections. The second movement is an intense funeral march,
whereas the final part is a rather tempestuous, troubled
movement, although it too has its calmer, more lyrical
episodes. The bulk of Triptych is a sincere,
deeply-felt tribute to Venizelos who was born in Crete,
which is the reason why the music sometimes hints either
at folk tunes and rhythms or at folk-inflected material.
The original third movement was to have been for chorus
and orchestra. It eventually became an independent choral
work, and Kalomiris composed a new, purely orchestral
Finale that now concludes the Triptych.
Kalomiris
often admitted the importance of Costis Palamas’ work for
his own creative achievement. Actually, his three symphonies
(Levendia Symphony – 1920, Symphony of
theGood and Innocent People – 1931
and the Third Symphony) are inspired by the Greek poet’s
works. The Symphony No.3 in D minor, completed
in 1955, bears the subtitle of ‘Palamian’, and words from
Palamas’s poem A Fay Gave me Birth (in the first movement)
and from TheDodecalogue of the Gypsy (in the
other three movements) are recited over music, in some sort
of melodrama. I know nothing of Palamas’ work, so it is difficult
to know why Kalomiris had such a high regard for him, and
how the music really relates to his poetic vision. The words
are printed in translation in the insert notes, which helps
a bit; but these do not explain why Kalomiris chose them.
The music is strong enough to make its point - in purely
musical terms; but some prior knowledge of Palamas’s achievement
might enhance one’s appreciation of a work that is obviously
highly regarded in Greek musical and artistic circles. Again,
the strength of the music is what matters most, at least
to foreign ears.
Structurally, the symphony is laid-out in
four movements with a short Scherzo placed second. Much like
the first panel of the Triptych, the first
movement opens with a resolute, if at first slightly reticent
theme that soon becomes more animated and strongly assertive.
The music slows down to a lighter dance-like episode before
regaining momentum, and moving forward with energy while
briefly pausing in some short slower sections. The impetus
is sustained for most of the first movement’s duration. It
briefly holds back at the words “Thus I roam, a stranger/Through
solitude’s way” before leading straight into the short dance-like
Scherzo. The third movement Love is a beautifully
lyrical meditation. The music is quite often lightly scored,
with beautiful solos, except for a couple of impassioned
climaxes. The fourth movement is again strongly epic in character,
in much the same vein as the first movement. The music, again,
has strong accents, with contrasting dance sections and some
capricious rhythmical episodes; but the overall tone is one
of powerful assertiveness. Kalomiris’s Third Symphony is
undoubtedly a great piece of music in its own right, that
judging from this performance clearly deserves to be heard.
The Three
Greek Dances were assembled in 1934, but originate
from earlier works. So, the opening Ballos is
a piano piece composed in 1917. The second dance Idyllic
Dance borrows material from Kalomiris’ first opera The
Master Builder (1916) whereas the final dance Tsakonikos (“Dance
from Tsakonia”) comes from his second opera The
Mother’s Ring (1917). Kalomiris’s music is certainly
more straightforward and less sophisticated that that
of Skalkottas’s Greek Dances, but this
short suite is pleasant enough, and well worth hearing.
The
final work is something of a curiosity. First, it is not
known when and why it was composed though it was first performed
in 1949. Second, it is a short - under two minutes - melodrama
for narrator and orchestra on a short poem by Solomos written
in homage to the island of Psará razed by the Ottomans in
1824 during the Greek War of Independence. Was it written
to celebrate the renewed peace after the dark years of World
War II? We do not know. Anyway, in spite of its brevity,
this piece is quite effective in its way; and I was briefly
reminded of Vaughan Williams’ wartime film scores, such as The
49th Parallel.
Although
I had never heard any of Kalomiris’s music before, I had
read some comments, mainly concerning his scoring described
as sometimes rather thick and opaque. Well, true, similar
comments were made about the scoring of Rubbra’s First Symphony,
although repeated hearings of that work brushed these adverse
comments aside. Anyway, I found this music really well made,
memorable, warmly scored but never to the point of thickness
or opacity. I am sure that the excellence of these performances
and a very natural recorded sound help make this often beautiful
and powerfully gripping music quite accessible. A superb
ear-opener and one that certainly augurs well for the forthcoming
instalments in what seems to be Naxos’s Greek Classics series.
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