
  
  Max LIFCHITZ (b.1948)
  Mosaico Latinoamericano (1991) [8:15]
  Yellow Ribbons No.44 (2007) [9:11]
  Yellow Ribbons No.43 (2007) [7:33]
  Three Songs for Soprano and Trumpet (1988) [8:18]
  Canto de Paz (1983) [2:59]
  Three Concerted Madrigals (2012) [7:36]
  Rhythmic Soundscape No.6 (2012) [12:18]
  Piano Silhouettes (2012) [14:58]
  Ars Nostra Ensemble
  rec. 2012, Concert Hall of the University of South Florida’s School of 
  Music, Tampa, Florida
  Texts included
  NORTH/SOUTH RECORDINGS NSR1058 [72:09]
  
   Lifchitz the Syncretic could be a short story by Sholem 
    Aleichem. In fact syncretic is the word Max Lifchitz chooses best to describe 
    his musical language and by it he means an amalgam of diverse trends and conventions. 
    The Mexican-born composer, resident now for nearly fifty years in New York, 
    certainly likes to balance his music between ‘simplicity and complexity’ 
    and does so with a great deal of craft and a huge amount of charm.
    
    His music feasts on binary oppositions, creatively employed, between urgency 
    and relaxation and between richer and thinner textures. Much is predicated 
    on dance rhythms. The intriguingly titled Mosaico Latinoamericano 
    for flute and piano (Kim McCormick and Lifchitz) is based on folk melodies 
    from Latin America and the Caribbean in which the flute’s increasing 
    urgency and the piano’s insistent percussiveness set up a fruitful tensions 
    – Lifchitz uses his piano as a drum, or offers little rhythmic prods. 
    Jollity is unleashed in the work’s second part where we encounter Three 
    Blind Mice and Mexican terpsichorean delights. The Yellow Ribbons 
    studies are works written in homage to the former American hostages held in 
    Iran in 1979. No.44 is a single movement containing three sections where traditional 
    sounds contend with some abrasive material and piano clusters, the music eventually 
    thinning to silence. No.43 is written for solo clarinet played here by Calvin 
    Falwell. Cast in six variations the play of tonal and modal is the point of 
    contrast, indeed friction, but attractively so.
    
    Kyoung Cho is the soprano soloist in the Three Songs, Jay Cobble 
    her trumpet partner. Some little military-interrogative material opens this 
    intriguing piece and there’s some Sprechstimme in the central song, 
    which is a setting of a poem by Ron Padgett called Insects. The last 
    song Honey, by Gary Lenhart, is the most serious, thoughtfully written 
    for trumpet and voice and full of quiet lyricism. After Sprechstimme comes 
    vocalise, which is the major component of the tautly attractive Canto 
    de Paz, for soprano, flute and ‘strum piano’, the last named 
    played by Kisun Lee. The Three Concerted Madrigals are warm pastiches 
    of Italian madrigals for the combination of soprano, flute, clarinet, trumpet 
    and percussion (Robert McCormick). The instrumental textures are vibrant and 
    attractive. Written for bass clarinet and percussion, Rhythmic Soundscape 
    No.6 gives the listener plenty of Lifchitz’s March themes as well 
    as a pawky dance in the last of the three in which the bass clarinet rises 
    and rises yet further whilst the percussion remains inconsolably resolute. 
    The longest piece is Piano Silhouettes, played by Sang-Hie Lee, five 
    short studies inspired by the art of Elisabeth Condon. All relevant five paintings 
    from her 2010-11 series called Climb the Black Mountain are beautifully 
    reproduced in colour in the booklet. If you like bifurcated Boogie, zesty 
    keyboard workouts and like nature studies you may well enjoy this set, including 
    the longest and most complex final setting too.
    
    The performances and recordings sound splendidly prepared and crafted, and 
    the composer’s presence is certainly a fillip when he appears, adding 
    his imprimatur to the first two pieces. Syncretic or not, this is a fine disc.
    
    Jonathan Woolf