Sunday 25 November 2018

Wandering Pathways: Music for recorder and chamber ensemble

This CD is a celebration of the centenary of the American conductor, composer and author Leonard Bernstein. Prima Facie has reissued his Variations on an Octatonic Scale, for recorder and cello (1988/9) along with an interesting selection of music by other composers including John McCabe, Alun Hoddinott, Robert Crawford and David Ellis. At the end of my review I note the source CD of each work.
The opening track features one of the last works composed by Bernstein. The piece was written as a gift for Helena, daughter of the film and television director Humphrey Burton. She is a competent recorderist.
The world premiere of the Variations on an Octatonic Scale was given at St. Catherine's Church, Port Erin, Isle of Man on 2 July 1997. The soloists were John Turner, recorder and Jonathan Price, cello. The theme was derived from Bernstein’s ballet score Dybbuk (1974). The same ‘tune’ was later used in the composer’s Concerto for Orchestra: Jubilee Games (1989).  The Variations is a fascinating little piece that explores some of the furthest reaches of recorder technique, including flutter-tonguing, low registers and overblowing.

Peter Hope’s Fantasia on John Dowland’s ‘Flow my Tears’ (2011) is interesting. It is a timeless work that is well-able to counterpoint the original instrumental sound of Dowland with something more astringent from the 21st century-and points between. There is even a rapturous jig. But the surprise twist is the introduction of a blues-inspired middle section. Somehow all this stylistic diversity holds together and creates a memorable piece of music that is faithful to Dowland’s original lament and the vicissitudes of our own day. Instrumentally, the work makes use of descant, treble and tenor recorders which test the soloist to the extreme. A little masterpiece.
I did wish that Robert Crawford’s Variations on a Ground, for recorder and string quartet went on longer that its four and a half minutes. Based on a six-bar ‘ground-bass’ formed from all twelve notes of the chromatic scale, this is a work that exudes invention and is a masterclass in the musical development of his ‘theme.’
These Variations were originally written in 1993 for recorder and piano and dedicated to John Turner and Peter Lawson. It was reworked in 2012 in the present arrangement, and was premiered at St Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh on 29 October 2013. This is a challenging work that is both intense in its working-out and deeply lyrical. It was to be Crawford’s last completed work.

Every year John Turner sends a ‘musical’ Christmas card to his friends and colleagues: it is an event that I always look forward to. And Xmas treat is literally the score of a carol printed on the card, with Seasonal Greetings! In fact, last year a CD from Divine Art (dda 25161) was issued featuring many of these remarkable carols. David Beck took the tune of one of these and reinvented it as ‘Carol Variations’ for recorder and harpsichord. This was soon followed by the present version featuring string quartet. It is a lovely little piece that begins and ends with the composer’s harmonisation of the tune. In-between, are five charming variations including a beautiful ‘siciliano.’ The work was completed in 2011.

Alun Hoddinott’s ‘Lizard Variants’ was inspired by a poem of Gwyn Thomas. It is written for solo recorder. This piece is written in a complex arch form and explores a wide variety of instrumental techniques and effects from the soloist. It was composed in 1998 in honour of Sir John Manduell’s 70th birthday. It is a demanding tour de force.
This poem was the inspiration for three further works by Hoddinott: Lizard for piano (1997), the song cycle Tymhorau (Seasons) op. 155b and Lizard: concerto for orchestra, op. 181 (2003).

David Ellis is a composer who deserves more recognition. The few works that I have heard, including the Symphony No.1, are impressive and interesting. The Elegiac Variations, op.66 for recorder, viola and cello, written in 2001 is a case in point. This is a set of highly contrasting variations that exhibit intensity and depth of feeling.  Written in ternary form, the middle section is vivacious whilst the opening and closing music is true to the title. They were written for John Turner.

A few months ago, I reviewed Peter Dickinson’s imaginative ‘Translations’ for recorder, gamba and harpsichord (1971) (PRIMA FACIE PFNSCD009). This is a challenging piece devised specifically for David Munrow. Most often associated with early music, Munrow was keen to promote contemporary works for early instruments.
I noted in my review that I am not a passionate early music enthusiast (I like my Bach played on the piano, rather than the clavichord or harpsichord!). On the other hand, Dickinson’s eclectic ‘take’ on the medium is ‘right up my street.’ Look out for the avant-garde tropes of the late sixties and seventies lining up with ‘pop’ melodies, jazz and even rock riffs. It is my favourite piece of ‘early music’!

I would not normally associate John McCabe with the ‘cow and gate’ movement in music. Certainly, I would not have expected a ‘Meditation on a Norfolk Ballad.’ Yet, all is not quite as ‘pastoral’ as the title would suggest. True, the music is based on deconstructed phrases from the folksong ‘The Captain’s Apprentice’ which was collected in Norfolk by RVW in the early years of the 20th century and used effectively in that composer’s Norfolk Rhapsody. McCabe has created a penetrating score that underlies the tragedy of the death of the apprentice, the subsequent mutiny of the crew and the inevitable justice to the ship’s captain. This is not just a setting of the folk-tune, but a complex representation of the musical material: it creates a deeply felt miniature tone-poem. A work that deserves to be better known.

The oldest piece on this disc is Richard Arnell’s Quintet ‘The Gambian.’ It dates from around the time that The Gambia gained independence from the United Kingdom in 1965. Apparently, the Reverend John Faye, High Commissioner sang a tune which was written down by Arnell and then entered in a competition for a new national anthem. They lost. The Quintet uses this ‘improvised’ tune as the theme. The Quintet (recorder and string quartet) opens with a rhapsodic introduction, followed by a set of variations and concluding with a ‘chorale.  It is a particularly attractive work that belies its prosaic genesis.

The most remarkable work on this CD is the final track: David Forshaw’s ‘Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird’, for recorder and string quartet. I understand that it was originally written in 1996 for recorder and piano and was subsequently transcribed for recorder and string quartet around 2000. Poetry aficionados will guess that the inspiration for the work is derived from American poet Wallace Stevens’s (spelt Stephens in the liner notes) poem of the same title. The liner notes explain that the music is not an ‘attempt to imitate the song of the blackbird’ nor is it divided into 13 sections. The composer has not totted up the songs to ensure a baker’s dozen have been sung. The title is merely ‘a catalyst to the development of the music.’ This is an ebullient work which explores a ‘random placement of differing musical cells’ evoking, rather than creating, a scientific recording of birdsong.

As always, John Turner plays this music with enthusiasm, sensitivity and technical brilliance. The members of the Camerata Ensemble and The Manchester Chamber Ensemble both directed by Richard Howarth and New World Ensemble led by Andy Long make a splendid contribution to these works. The recording is ideal.
The liner notes are assembled by John Turner, presumably from the original CD releases. They are most helpful and provide a brief note on each composer and their contribution to this disc.  The only downside to this CD is the track-listing on the rear cover. This is very difficult to read, due to the use of white text on a variegated background.

John Turner is dedicated to promoting recorder music of all eras, however, he is specially to be commended for his sterling achievement in introducing many ‘modern’ works to the repertoire. ‘Wandering Pathways’ is  splendid collection of music that will interest, amuse, move and satisfy listeners who enjoy this unique instrument.

Track Listing:
Wandering Pathway
Leonard BERNSTEIN (1918-90) Variations on an Octatonic Scale, for recorder and cello (1988/9)
Peter HOPE (b.1930): Fantasia on John Dowland’s ‘Flow my Tears’ for recorder and string quartet (2011)
Robert CRAWFORD (1925-2012): Variations on a Ground, for recorder and string quartet (1993/2012)
David BECK (b.1941) Carol Variations, for recorder and string quartet (2011)
Alun HODDINOTT (1929-2008) Lizard: Variants, op. 166 no. 2, for solo recorder (1998)
David ELLIS (b.1933) Elegiac Variations, op. 66, for recorder, viola and cello (2001)
Peter DICKINSON (b.1934) Translations, for recorder, gamba and harpsichord (1971)
John MCCABE (1939-2015) Meditation on a Norfolk Ballad for recorder and string quartet (2013)
Richard ARNELL (1917-2009) Quintet (The Gambian), op. 107, for recorder and string quartet Op. 107, for recorder and string quartet (1966)
David FORSHAW (b.1938) Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird, for recorder and string quartet (1996/2000)
John Turner (recorders), Jonathan Price (cello), Richard Tunnicliffe (gamba), Harvey Davies (harpsichord).  
Camerata Ensemble &The Manchester Chamber Ensemble/Richard Howarth, New World Ensemble/Andy Long
PRIMA FACIE PFCD091  


No comments: