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| Look at that cover design! |
Friday, January 15, 2016
Far More Than Mediocre: Salieri's Les Danaides
Labels:
CD review,
Salieri,
Tassis Christoyannis,
Thomas Dolié
Wednesday, December 9, 2015
Seasonal Special: Advent
Once again I find myself in the sweet spot of a target audience, this time as choral music aficionado and Liturgy Nerd. The commercial season of Christmas has been going on long enough to bring a Scrooge-like gleam to the eye. In liturgical terms, however, we're still in the midst of Advent: a season, ideally, of quiet anticipation. It's one of my favorite times of the liturgical year, so it was with great delight that I discovered a new CD dedicated to music written for it. The Junger Kammerchor Rhein-Neckar, under the direction of Mathias Rickert, has recorded a really rich album, featuring not only music from such luminaries as Byrd, Victoria, and Pärt, but also many creative arrangements and original pieces by contemporary composers. Predictably, I love it.
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Late Romanticism in Lieder: Mahler Contemporaries
| Recording venue: St. Jacob the Greater, Jihlava |
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Medieval/modern Sunday special: Responsio
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| The Coronation of the Virgin, Rheims Cathedral |
Sunday, November 15, 2015
Sunday Special: Divine Redeemer
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| Church of the Gesù, Milwaukee |
Labels:
CD review,
Christine Brewer,
Gounod,
Handel,
Hugo Wolf,
J.S. Bach,
Puccini,
sacred music
Monday, November 2, 2015
Jedermann: Sibelius meditates on mortality
Gentle Readers, I suggest that we banish the phrase "hidden masterpiece." Agreed? Good. Leaving that meaningless cliché aside, I can go on to happily discuss why Sibelius' 1916 music for Hofmannsthal's Jedermann (1911) is really worth a listen. Atmospheric and harmonically rich, it's a treat in its own right, doing interesting things with musical form. Rarely performed or recorded, it has a new and engaging recording from the Finnish forces of the Turku Philharmonic under Leif Segerstram, and the Cathedralis Aboensis Choir. Sibelius composed the work to adhere exactly to stage directions, a prescription that the CD leaflet speculatively blames for its rare performance. I can't hear that, myself. The piece is not symmetrically composed, but it's richly allusive, lively and meditative by turns. Sibelius may have been annoyed that the devil never came in on cue, but there's plenty to enjoy in the piece without its accompanying morality play. The work is rounded out, on the disc, by thematically similar works of the composer from around the same period.
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Love, Loss, and the Sea: Soile Isokoski sings French art song
Soile Isokoski's album of lush French art songs resists easy classification. It doesn't have a title; its design doesn't seem to strive for a particular atmosphere. It is in many ways a slowly unfolding disc, subtle and richly layered. The Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra, under the baton of John Storgårds, provides a delicately nuanced reading of some of the nineteenth century's more ecstatic outpourings. While far from averse to a bit of musical decadence, I appreciated the unusually intellectual approach of Storgårds and Isokoski. Although I anticipated that Les Nuits d'Été would form the centerpiece of the disc, I found the very philosophical ecstasies of Chausson's Poème de l'amour et de la mer to be its unexpected standout.
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