Szymon Kuran died at 
                forty-nine. He was a violinist, principally 
                active as orchestral leader both in 
                his native Poland and later in Iceland, 
                but also a soloist. He gave the Icelandic 
                premieres of both the Panufnik Concerto 
                and Szymanowski’s First. Interested 
                in jazz he formed a "string jazz" 
                quartet, which recorded and was much 
                admired. And he also composed. He was 
                made Artist of the Year in Reykjavik 
                in 1994. 
              
 
              
These are the merest 
                essential details of a regrettably short 
                life. This disc is also on the short 
                side at forty-three minutes but it does 
                present Kuran’s biggest and most important 
                classical composition, his Requiem. 
                And now it serves that melancholy duty 
                for its composer. It was written between 
                1994 and 2000. The text is in Latin 
                – there’s a short interpolated prayer 
                in Polish – and it’s written for three 
                choirs (children’s, male and female), 
                strings, percussion, and an eclectic 
                array of other instruments including 
                electric guitar. There’s a strong role 
                for the solo violin, a role that the 
                composer would have taken himself on 
                disc had not fate decreed otherwise. 
              
 
              
The Requiem is a most 
                approachable, tonal work. Perhaps a 
                near reference point, though I stress 
                "near," is Arvo Pärt 
                – the deep Russian sounding basses in 
                the opening movement certainly reinforce 
                the impression. It’s a work of humility 
                and humanity as well, with bells used 
                warmly and the solo violin sweetly in 
                the Dies irae – mostly in reverie, 
                and with folk influenced melodic lines. 
                In the Rex tremendae we hear 
                some terse and stern percussive statements 
                and implacable men’s voices but the 
                consoling Lacrimosa – all women’s 
                voices and coiling smoke violin - acts 
                as balm. There are hints of Brahms’s 
                own German Requiem in the Offertorium 
                and in the percussion-dominated Sanctus-Benedictus 
                it’s more a case of Pärt once more 
                and maybe Gorecki. The girl’s solo voice 
                in the Oratio II is joined by 
                the once-more-active solo violin; the 
                work ends in consoling quietude. 
              
 
              
Post mortem 
                is a brief work, lasting less than four 
                minutes, written for solo violin and 
                string orchestra and dedicated to the 
                victims of the Gdansk attacks in 1981. 
                A serene Bach Chorale-like theme is 
                assailed by skittering high strings 
                but there is a measure of resolution 
                at the end. Um nóttina was 
                written in the same year as the Requiem. 
                It’s rapt, otherworldly, reflective 
                and refined – a sort of stripped down 
                Vasks. 
              
 
              
This is a noble salute 
                to Kuran. The Requiem was recorded live 
                whilst the companion works were taped 
                in the studio. All the performances 
                are impressively assured and the notes 
                are sympathetic. There is no jazz here, 
                for those who may know Kuran from his 
                quartet work. His classical compositions 
                are serious but gently affirmative. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf