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David Felder,
In Between(1999)
Daniel Druckman, percussion;
June in Buffalo Festival Orchestra, Harvey Sollberger, conductor
Morton Feldman, The Viola in My Life IV(1971)
Jesse Levine, viola
June in Buffalo Festival Orchestra, Jan Williams, conductor
David Felder, Coleccion Nocturna(1984)
Jean Kopperud, clarinet, James Winn, piano
June in Buffalo Festival Orchestra, Harvey Sollberger, conductor
Morton Feldman, Instruments II(1975)
June in Buffalo Festival Orchestra, Jan Williams, Conductor |
Electronic Music Foundation, Inc., EMF CD 033
116 North Lake Avenue, Albany NY 12206, USA
Available Online – Cde Music cde@emf.org
$ 16
www.cdemusic.org/emfmedia/
This review relates to the June in Buffalo 2000 Festival which Hans-Theodor
Wohlfahrt covered for Seen & Heard last year.
His detailed report can be read here
(editor).
Morton Feldman (1926-1987) wrote his Instruments II in
the same year he founded June in Buffalo,
a festival for emerging young composers at the music department of the
State University of New York at Buffalo, where he taught. David Felder,
who had been asked to join the music faculty at Feldman´s invitation
in 1985, took over the Festival’s artistic direction and has been in
charge ever since. On June 5th, 2000, the 25th anniversary of the Festival
opened triumphantly, and, thanks to David Felder, had been recorded
(Slee Hall, Amherst NY, June 6-9 2000). The result is an artistically
and technically outstanding CD, produced by Felder himself, who for
this occasion had assembled the hand-picked June in Buffalo Festival
Orchestra, consisting of 57 of the best instrumental specialists
in contemporary music in the States and overseas. From the original
concert, only For Toru by Lukas Foss is missing - sadly, but
there was no more space.
David Felder revised his monumental one movement concerto for
percussion and extended chamber orchestra, originally composed for a
soloist with electronics (1991), between 1999 and 2000. There could
not have been a more impressive and forward-looking start to the anniversary
celebrations than its world premiere with the impressive percussionist
Daniel Druckman, to whom (as well as to the memory of Morton
Feldman) it is dedicated. David Felder is known for writing extremely
complex, but deep surging and uplifting music - and this work is no
exception. The constant eruptions are volcanic, but what happens in
between is not only a mesmerising kaleidoscope of colours and rhythms,
it is also music of quiet as well as explosive danger. The level of
energy captivates the listener right from the beginning and I am again
fascinated by the way Felder manages - as he does in all his other works
- to create a kind of tension one can not escape from until the final
bar. Despite many purely technical thoughts, with regards to the various
musical materials and their interaction, this music expresses endless
visions of angst, of vulnerability - and of hope. The work is virtuosic
in the extreme – and not only for the soloist, who next to a battery
of instruments, also plays a five-octave marimba and a KAT midi controller
- but for all 57 musicians, including three more percussion players.
It has "a virtuosity on a Lisztian scale", the New York composer Nils
Vigeland writes in his short, but pregnant introduction.
Collecion Nocturna was composed between 1982/1983 but also exists
in a chamber version for two soloists and four-channel tape -available
on Mode CD 89 (S&H October 2000).
The orchestral version, first played by the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
with the composer as conductor, with the legendary Yvar Mikhashoff on
piano and William Powell on clarinets in its 1985-6 season, is also
vintage Felder. Based on a self-contained musical object from an earlier
work, it contains five continuous variations for soloists, mid-sized
orchestra and tape. It takes its inspiration from the poem Collecion
Nocturna by the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, which Felder describes
in his own words as "powerfully evocative images of a surreal nocturnal
landscape, great distance, both physical and spiritual, and a world
rich in energy and exhausted isolation." Of course, Felder created his
own searching musical poems full of intensity and atmospheric sensuousness,
of danger and loneliness. Written fifteen years before In Between,
it nevertheless creates the same tension and forces an unbiased ear
to listen. In a musical world, which to a great extent is occupied by
experimentalism, minimalistic deadening and public orientated vulgar
emptiness the music by David Felder opens a whole new world of deep
rooted honesty and vision - a true composer of the 21st century.
Buffalo is almost unique and the legacy of Morton Feldman is
still vividly alive, even today. The two works of Feldman’s on this
recording could not be more different. Instruments II mirrors
Feldman´s ideal of the flat surface, while The Viola in My Life IV
is atypical and very unusual for a composer who created a stagnant sense
of time. Here, the solo viola sings a deeply emotional song, a kind
of love letter, while the sparing and transparent orchestra sound serves
as a delicate and sometimes powerful background. The soloist Jesse
Levine creates the most beautiful lyrical intimacy. This composition
shows Morton Feldman as the true genius he has become.
Morton Feldman and David Felder may musically be worlds apart, but they
were close friends, accepted each other totally and created this magical
island in Buffalo, where over the last 25 years contemporary music was
able to blossom. This immaculate CD documents, therefore, not only two
exceptional composers, but thanks to David Felder, also the unbroken
spirit of June in Buffalo.
Hans-Theodor Wohlfahrt
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