This is one of a pair of '21st Century Portraits' released
by Capriccio in 2012, the impressive other being devoted to German composer
Christian Jost (C5118). At the time of writing a third volume has just come
out, given over not to a single composer but - somewhat incongruously and
ironically - to the 'Ensemble xx. Jahrhundert'.
Vienna-based Taiwanese composer Chieh Shih, a naturalised Austrian styled
simply 'Shih', drops the listener right in at the deep end with his
Die
Überquerung des Flusses, which opens with a cacophony of metallic
percussion, not unlike a stack of dustbins being thrown off a building. An
hour later, in the final
Die Trennung - along with
Die Überquerung
des Flusses, part of a larger triptych, incidentally - there are several
mind-blowingly chromatic crescendos. As the booklet notes promise, Shih does
indeed blend occidental and oriental elements, but in a decidedly modernist
way, with an emphasis on textures, atmospherics and psychology rather than
form, melody or harmony. Only the appearance of the erhu and pipa in
Ein
Takt for nine instruments truly point to Chinese influences.
In fact it is the Austrian side of Shih that is uppermost in these works,
meaning that some listeners may find some of the language and violence disturbing!
By way of mitigation, the three middle tracks,
Wanderschaft and both
works bearing the title 'Ein Takt', are much less clangorous than the outer
pair, though they too are highly animated, virtuosic and unequivocally modernist
in idiom. An appreciation of the likes of Carter, Birtwistle or early Penderecki
is virtually a prerequisite for understanding Shih's music, whereas an interest
in traditional Chinese music will take the prospective listener almost nowhere.
There is some superbly responsive, empathetic musicianship on display on this
recording, both from the excellent ensemble 'Die Reihe' and the National Symphony
Orchestra Taiwan under Chien Wen-Pin. Soprano Anu Komsi is Finnish and sings
German with a foreign lilt, but in
Wanderschaft her voice quality,
control and power are all terrific, making it a simple matter to overlook
any such ‘transgression’. Serbian pianist Anika Vavić also
merits a name-check for her intensive trill-fest in
Ein Takt.
Recordings at both venues have been very well done, with spacious, moist,
at times almost 'super-audio' reproduction. All are live captures, and the
odd audience cough can be heard, inevitably at the more inopportune moments,
but their distraction value is limited.
The booklet notes are relatively brief but still useful, if slightly pretentious
in their Teutonic wordiness. Translations into English have been done by a
German-speaker, leaving them with a slight accent.
Byzantion
Contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk
An appreciation of the likes of Carter, Birtwistle or early Penderecki is
a prerequisite for understanding Shih. Superbly responsive, empathetic musicianship.