Tuesday, 10 September 2013

August 2013 - Classical Music

Bach, J.S.
  • Christus, der ist mein Leben (Christ, who is my life)
  • Erforsche mich, Gott, und erfahre mein Herz (Search me, God, and know my heart)
  • Warum betrübst du dich, mein Herz (Why are you downcast, my soul)
  • Keyboard Partitas 1 to 6
  • Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue
Barber - Second Essay for Orchestra
Barber - 2 Songs, Op.18
Beethoven - Symphonies 7 and 8
Beethoven - String Quartet No.11, 'Quartetto Serioso' 
Bridge
  • There Is A Willow Grows Aslant a Brook
  • Sir Roger de Coverley (A Christmas Dance) - full orchestra version and strings version
  • 2 Songs of Rabindranath Tagore  (orchestral versions)
  • Vignettes de Danse
  • 2 Intermezzi from 'Threads'
  • 2 Entr'actes (Rosemary, Canzonetta)
Dvorak
  • String Quartet No.4
  • String quartet movement in F major
  • 2 Waltzes for string quartet (arranged by Dvorak from piano pieces) 
Faure
  • Songs, opuses 76, 83, 85 and 87
  • Melisande's Song (from incidental music for Pelleas and Melisande)
  • Papillon for cello and piano
  • Sicilienne for cello and piano
  • 8 short pieces for piano
  • Impromptu 'No. 6' for piano (transcription of impromptu for harp)
Heller - 30 Progressive Etudes, Op.46
Janacek
  • Sinfonietta
  • Taras Bulba
  • Lachian Dances
  • Pohadka (Fairy Tale, for cello and piano)
  • Presto for cello and piano 
Liszt
  • Orpheus
  • Heroide Funebre
  • Die Ideale
  • Two Episodes from Lenau's 'Faust' 
Minkus/Delibes - La Source (The Spring)
Mozart
  • Symphony No.38, 'Prague'
  • Piano Sonata No.14
  • Fantasia in C minor 
Poulenc
  • Suite Francaise (piano version)
  • Francaise
  • Promenades
  • Improvisations 13 and 14
  • Piece Breve on the name of Albert Roussel
  • Bourree for the Pavillion of Auvergne
  • Feuillets d'album (Album leaves)
  • Capriccio for 2 pianos
  • Elegie for 2 pianos
  • L'Embarquement pour Cythere for 2 pianos
Rachmaninov - Piano Concerto No.1
Ravel - Menuet Antique
Schumann - Papillons (Butterflies)
Schumann - Davidsbundlertanze (Dances of the League of David)
Vivaldi - Filiae maestae Jerusalem (Mournful daughters of Jerusalem)
Vivaldi - Non in pratis aut in hortis (Neither in meadows nor in gardens)

That's a pretty long list! Although many of the works are quite short.

I suddenly realised during the month that I had abandoned Mozart some 18 months ago, leaving him hanging mid-chronology. I suspect this was mostly due to shifting my focus to other composers when I bought new CDs, but it may have also had to do with the Sonata and Fantasia in C minor, works with which I'm relatively unfamiliar.  And that, in turn, is mostly because I simply don't like the Fantasia very much. I still don't, but it turns out that I quite like the sonata on its own. From now on I'll be more likely to ignore the traditional pairing of the 2 works.

The Bach cantatas are back. I acquired another 10 CDs worth, which still, amazingly enough, means that I have less than half of the total.

Just when I start thinking that this might be overkill and my fetish for complete sets might be unwise in this instance, there's some magical little bit of music that makes me think it's worthwhile exploring all this Bach.  Christus, der ist mein Leben (BWV 95 in the standard Bach catalogue) has this amazing tenor aria in it that I found myself listening to repeatedly - in fact I've just put it on again while writing this. I would post a link if I could find a version that I enjoy as much as the one that I have, which is by Masaaki Suzuki and the Bach Collegium Japan.

My listening to the orchestral works of Frank Bridge has recently reached the 'late' works, and There Is A Willow Grows Aslant A Brook is a piece full of eerie magic. The title is a line from Hamlet, the beginning of the description of Ophelia's drowning, and the music fits this imagery wonderfully well. Special mention for atmosphere must also go to Janacek's Pohadka, which I found completely enchanting from the very beginning.

Liszt, too, managed to engage me a couple of times this month. Heroide Funebre (somewhat difficult to translate - one version I've seen suggested something like 'funeral letter to a hero') is one of the more moody symphonic poems, and so is rescued from Liszt's tendency for blustering. But even more successful were the Two Episodes from Lenau's 'Faust'.  The second piece is much better known on its own as the first Mephisto Waltz, but I found both of them to be quite satisfying and Liszt explicitly wanted them treated as a pair.

The two Vivaldi works I listened to are both introductory works for a Miserere, a psalm setting used for Good Friday, but the Miserere itself is lost.  Both of the introductions are, not surprisingly, also quite moody!

Thursday, 5 September 2013

August 2013 - Popular Music

Tori Amos - Boys for Pele
Tori Amos - Abnormally Attracted to Sin
Missy Higgins - The Ol' Razzle Dazzle
Jars of Clay - The Long Fall Back to Earth
John Mayer - Born and Raised
Pearl Jam - Vs
Seal - Human Being

 It's taken me a long time to get around to listening to The Long Fall Back to Earth.  It is yet another of the CDs that I bought in the latter part of last year in a huge binge, knowing that it might take some time to work through them all.  And in this case it had to at least wait until I had absorbed an earlier Jars of Clay release, Redemption Songs.

On first listen I had thought that my reaction to The Long Fall Back to Earth might be similar, one of mild disappointment at the level of inspiration.  That would make several Jars of Clay albums in a row that hadn't been overly impressive, and to be honest during some of that first listen I was beginning to wonder if it was time to 'let go' of the band and just accept that I was no longer going to find their new work all that satisfying.

But then I started hearing things that I responded to. Partly it was that some tracks in the second half of the album made a better impression, but then as I listened to the whole album a second, third, fourth time, I enjoyed more of the songs throughout the record.

I think part of my difficulty was that this is very much a 'pop' record, perhaps the most pop one of Jars of Clay's career. They've never exactly been far from the mainstream anyway, but here they are supplying songs that are unashamedly in the pop mould, and borrowing particularly heavily from the 1980s. A song like 'Heaven' (actually one of the more rock-oriented tracks) could have been planted by a time traveller into a radio broadcast circa 1984 and few people would have noticed.



And on that basis a lot of the songs work. Yes, in some ways their lyrical ideas are simpler and less subtle than in what I would consider the best of the band's songs, without the beautiful turns of phrase, but only a few of the songs veer into sounding trite.

There's enough here to make me continue to be interested in the band's 'future' work - they released a new album last week, so I'm still a couple behind. In truth I'm not sure I've ever felt they are a band that delivers albums without weak points (other than their 3rd album, If I Left the Zoo), but so long as the strong tracks outweigh the poor I'll probably keep listening.  And make one hell of a 'best of' mix for myself at some point.

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

July 2013 - Classical Music

Dvorak - String Quartets 7 to 14

After a couple of false starts, I finally realised my intention of listening to all of Dvorak's 'mature' quartets.

Except deciding just where the maturity begins isn't really any easy task. I've seen all sorts of opinions about which works are the ones worth listening to.  The last 3 are universally listed, but those were all written in the 1890s.  It's less obvious to decide where to place a boundary between quartets 5 (1873), 6 (also 1873), 7 (1874), 8 (1876), 9 (1877), 10 (1878/9) and 11 (1881).

I decided to start with number 7 for a couple of reasons. One was that number 6 is a work that Dvorak felt the need to revise but never finished revising. So it was something he himself was somewhat dissatisfied with. Another reason is that number 7 was the first to be published, and also (a few years later) the first to be performed at a public concert.  So this is where people were sufficiently impressed to become interested in Dvorak as a composer.

I have a vague plan for sometime in the future to work through these quartets backwards rather than forwards, and see at which point I start feeling that the level of engagement has dropped.  Because it's fairly clear to me that Dvorak's earliest quartets, while having a lot of nice tunes, really show him struggling to know what to do with those tunes.  The music tends to ramble on without clear contours or contrast.

But all the works I listened to in July had a fair amount of reward. I'm not entirely sure I could identify one as a personal favourite yet... possibly number 10? Recollection is already a little tricky.

I'm more sure that number 12, the 'American' quartet, is not my favourite. I don't dislike it, but I don't think it's typical Dvorak and I think it's one of those pieces where the popularity derives at least partly from a memorable gimmick (not unlike Shostakovich's 'autobiographical' 8th string quartet, which is one of my least favourite in that composers' quartet series). I wouldn't say it's not worth listening to by any means, but I think it's a shame that it has become so popular as to overshadow the other works.