thu 28/03/2024

Classical CDs Weekly: Olivia De Prato, Kärt Ruubel, Third Coast Percussion | reviews, news & interviews

Classical CDs Weekly: Olivia De Prato, Kärt Ruubel, Third Coast Percussion

Classical CDs Weekly: Olivia De Prato, Kärt Ruubel, Third Coast Percussion

Electro-acoustic violin, aquatic percussion and a disc of baroque keyboard suites

Finding Froberger: pianist Kärt Ruubel

 

Olivia De Prato's StreyaStreya: New works for solo violin and violin with electronics Olivia De Prato (violin) (New Focus Recordings)

Combining acoustic instruments with electronics is a dark art, and tantalisingly few details about the process are revealed in the sleeve notes to violinist Olivia De Prato’s recital disc. Are the electronics taped or generated live? How is De Prato experiencing them? And how are the sounds notated, if at all? We're not told. Three electro-acoustic pieces are included here. Most immediate is Missy Mazzoli’s Vespers for Violin, a deep, warm bath of sound which sets solo violin against a backdrop of sampled keyboards, vocals and wheezy organs. The two elements are convincingly conjoined, a hesitant start swelling to ecstatic heights before a sumptuous fade. Lovely stuff. Intriguing if less euphonious is Samson Young’s Ageha.Tokyo, the pulsating accompaniment presumably evoking the Tokyo nightclub the work is named after. Taylor Brook’s Wane has De Prato shadowed by a quartet of her prerecorded selves, each tuned slightly differently. It's technically impressive, if unsettling.

Victor Lowrie’s Streya is an angular, explosive attempt to portray the birth of a star, and Percorso Insolito by Ned Rothenberg is an engaging depiction of De Prato traversing a hilly landscape. Reiko Füting’s Tanz.Tanz is based on the closing movement of Bach's D minor Partita, a shimmering, elusive delight. De Prato's confidence brings this challenging repertoire to colourful life, and production values are superb.

Auff die MayerinAuff die Maÿerin: Suites by Bach, Froberger, Fux and Handel Kärt Ruubel (piano) (Genuin)

This delicious anthology of baroque keyboard music played on a modern Steinway offers a welcome chance to become acquainted with one Johann Jakob Froberger. Born in Stuttgart in 1616, he was pivotal in establishing the keyboard suite as a standard form. Rehabilitating Froberger has been a labour of love for Estonian pianist Kärt Ruubel, whose research revealed that pianists have rarely touched his music. It's hard to understand why: Froberger’s tiny Partita No 6 Auff die Maÿerin is irresistible in Ruubel’s hands, a cheery suite based on a naïve folk song. Then there's his Lamentation in F minor, written to mark the passing of Froberger's Viennese employer Ferdinand III, full of quirky harmonies and a sense of deep melancholy. Ruubel makes this troubled work glow, and the unexpected F major close (a depiction of Ferdinand ascending to heaven?) is delicious. More Froberger please, and from this pianist.

Johan Joseph Fux’s Suite No 3 is another miniature marvel, its technical demands (listen to that bourée) effortlessly surmounted, and there's more familiar fare in the shape of music by Bach and Handel. The latter's Suite No 6 in D minor gets a frisky, rhythmically sharp reading and Bach’s French Suite No 2 is exquisitely done, the “Sarabande” poised and elegant. A lovely disc, and beautifully recorded to boot.

Paddle to the SeaThird Coast Percussion: Paddle to the Sea (Cedille)

Musical material which might in some circumstances seem naïve or simplistic rarely does so when scored for percussion. Take a work like Reich’s Music for Pieces of Wood - who'd have imagined that the thwacking of different sized sticks could sound so cool? Chicago’s Third Coast Percussion have already recorded an impressive Reich CD, but this new one is based around something different. Paddle to the Sea is a suite composed collaboratively by the group's players, designed to accompany showings of a 1966 film adaptation of an iconic children's book about a toy canoe travelling from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean. It's a substantial, 33 minute work, a parade of enchanting watery vignettes. The pace ebbs and flows to match the watercourses traversed by the canoe, the mood veering between serenity and agitation. It's enchanting, though would have been better still had there been a way to include the film as part of the package. I'll search for it on YouTube.

Third Coast Percussion admit that their score allowed them “to pay homage to some artists that we admire”, and works by said influences are included as couplings. Philip Glass’s 12 Pieces for Ballet were arranged by a Brazilian ensemble and became Aguas da Amazonia. Four of them were adapted further by Third Coast, each named after the Amazon and three of its tributaries. Whereas Glass’s extended works often outstay their welcome, these four little pieces delight. Interspersed with the Glass are the six movements of Jacob Druckman’s epic solo marimba opus, Reflections on the Nature of Water, the playing duties shared between the group. Plus a transcription of a Zimbabwean melody, the original’s thumb piano textures now heard on marimba, shakers and vocals. This is an enormously enjoyable album – attractively designed and well-annotated. Cedille’s engineering is rich and vivid – this is the best percussion disc I've heard in ages.

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