The opening work on this CD is
superb. Cuckmere: A Portrait (2016-18) was originally conceived as a score
to accompany a film depicting ‘a year in the life of the River Cuckmere and
Haven in Sussex.’ This richly diverse landscape lies in a flood plain
(fortunately at present undeveloped) with the river wending its way towards the
iconic Seven Sisters and then out into the English Channel. The liner notes note
that this area has inspired many artists, including the great Eric Ravilious.
Ed Hughes has explained that this
score is all about movement – ‘movement across a landscape, movement within the
landscape and movement that is the unstoppable flow of the river, the passage
of time and the changing of seasons.’ Into all this activity, a few moments of
perfect peace interpose themselves. Cuckmere: A Portrait has eight
movements or sections. This represents the four seasons, provides an opening
‘Prelude’ as well as three interludes. The first season majored on is ‘Autumn’ then
progressing through winter and spring to high summer. This music reminds me of the old Greek
philosopher Heraclitus, who wisely said that ‘we cannot step in the same river
twice.’ (Frag.41). Hughes score reflects the old English meaning of Cuckmere,
which is quite simply ‘ever-flowing’. The sound world here is stunning. The
music ranges from a gentle minimalism towards piquant dissonances. The scoring
is always colourful, innovative and illuminated. It makes for an ideal impression of a river
flowing inexorably towards the sea.
One can only hope that
‘developers’ do not choose to build on this flood plain and destroy what is
clearly a magical part of the Kingdom. Fortunately, much of the river’s course
is contained in the Seven Sisters Country Park.
Media Vita is a remarkable
work. Written early in Hughes’s career, it is like a free fantasia on 16th
century composer John Sheppard’s eponymous motet. This has been reworked,
expanded and twisted into a piano trio. Once again, the instrumental scoring
adds considerable value to this interesting formal [re]creation. The style and
mood of the music certainly made me recall that 'In
the midst of life we are in death' which is the text that Sheppard used for his
masterpiece.
I
am not sure how to approach the Sinfonia. According to the liner notes this is
a piece of programme music. For example, in the first of six movements we are
encouraged to ‘hear the arrows fly and the hatchets land in Agincourt’ and then
in the second, ‘Stella Celi Extirpavit/mortis pestem’ (The Star of Heaven has
rooted out the deathly plague) the supplicants’ prayers to Our Lady are ‘heard’.
To be fair, what Hughes is doing is ‘responding to his deep love of
compositional history’ of the period between 1400 and 1600. In a long sentence
he has claimed that the Sinfonia was ‘a creative response to English music of this
period that would acknowledge my debt to the emotional life of this music, with
its soaring lines (like cathedrals), its curious structures, its high culture
(for chapels, courts) but with the popular or vernacular also sometimes echoed
in the legacy of notated manuscripts, its balance between the sacred and the profane.’
Take a breath. Hughes has once again used ‘pre-existing’ musical compositions
to generate his formal and melodic structures but has twisted them so far from
their exemplars as to be unrecognisable.
I
think the clue to enjoying this work is to dump the ‘programme’ but keep in
mind the tension between the ‘sacred and profane.’ It is a remarkably taut score,
with many felicitous moments. Often dissonant in sound, there are several
lyrical and sometimes even ‘romantic’ passages emerging from, or sinking into,
the progress of the work.
The
playing on the CD is excellent in all three works. The recording is ideal. Ed
Hughes has written illuminating liner notes that give both an outline and a
detailed analysis of each work. A good biography of the composer can be found on
his Website.
When so much modern ‘classical’
or ‘art’ music seems to be caught in the doldrums of commercialised sub-Einaudi
meanderings and insipid harmonies, it is refreshing to come across a composer
who writes in a style that is challenging without being off-putting. I cut my
teeth on music in the early 1970s, so I was not averse to hearing ‘progressive’
music by the ‘greats’ of that time such as Stockhausen, Peter Maxwell Davies
and Pierre Boulez. After a series of ‘isms’ including minimalism, computer
music, new simplicity and new complexity, Ed Hughes music comes as a refreshing
change. I guess that it is post-modernist and eclectic in the sense that the
composer is willing and able to use a wide variety of musical inspirations and palettes.
He writes in a trajectory from the earliest English vocal music composers of
the 14th century down to the present day, His ability to adapt,
recreate and bend this music to his own voice is remarkable.
Track Listing:
Ed HUGHES (b.1968)
Cuckmere: A Portrait (2016-18)
Media Vita (1991)
Sinfonia (2018)
Orchestra of Sound and Light/Ed Hughes (Cuckmere); New Music
Players Piano Trio: Susanne Stanzeleit (violin); Joe Giddey (cello); Richard
Casey (piano) (Media Vita); New Music Players/Nicholas Smith (Sinfonia)
Rec. Attenborough Centre for
Creative Arts, University of Sussex, 5 May 2018 (Live performance) (Cuckmere: A
Portrait); The Warehouse, Theed Street, London, 28 September 2018 (Media Vita,
Sinfonia)
MÉTIER
msv 28597
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review
was first published.
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