Tuesday, 27 September 2016

Classical Music - July 2016

Bach, J.S. - Christum wir sollen loben schon (We should already praise Christ)
Beethoven
  • Piano Concerto No.1
  • Septet
  • String Quartet No.6
  • Violin Sonatas 3 and 4
  • Piano Sonatas 5, 7 and 9 
Chopin
  • Barcarolle
  • Polonaise-Fantaisie
  • 2 Nocturnes, op.62 
Dvorak
  • Symphony No.7
  • String Quartets 4, 5 and 7
  • Stabat Mater
  • The Spectre's Bride
  • Psalm 149
  • Ave Maria
  • Hymnus ad laudes in festo Sanctissimae Trinitatis
  • Ave Maris stella
  • O Sanctissima 
Faure - Violin Sonata No.1
Faure - Cello Sonata No.2 
Haydn
  • Symphonies 82, 85, 87, 90, 95, 97, 98 and 102
  • Stabat Mater
  • Missa Cellensis in honorem BVM ('Cacilienmesse')
  • Missa in honorem BVM ('Grosse Orgelsolomesse')
Holmboe
  • Concerto No.3 (for clarinet)
  • Inuit Songs
  • Glemselshejren (The Heron of Oblivion) 
Mozart - Piano Concertos 8, 9, 11, 12, 20, 21, 22 and 27 
Nielsen - [various songs and choral works translated into English]
Nørgård - Two Pastorales (version with piano)
Schubert - Arpeggione Sonata
Schubert - Piano Sonata in A minor, D.845
Shostakovich
  • Symphony No.14
  • String Quartet No.12
  • Seven Romances on Poems of Alexander Blok
  • Violin Sonata (2nd movement, orchestrated)
Sibelius - Symphonies 6 and 7
Sibelius - Tapiola

I didn't mention last month that I had begun listening to a new purchase, a box of Mozart's piano concertos performed by Murray Perahia and the English Chamber Orchestra. I wasn't familiar with the concertos, having only heard a couple of them on individual occasions, but I was aware of their reputation as containing some of Mozart's finest music.

That reputation is holding up well as I start exploring Perahia's recordings. Somehow, Mozart makes more sense as a great composer in this context. It's as if the combination of piano soloist with orchestra is a natural fit for Mozart's talents, his grace and style. It probably doesn't hurt that many of these works were designed to showcase his own pianism, and therefore his own strengths.

There were two other new purchases at the same time, and again I didn't mention them in the entry for June although I did start listening to them at the end of that month. One was a box of Haydn's masses (plus the Stabat Mater), which represents entirely new territory for me. Indeed, I don't know all that many masses by any composer.  So far my reaction has been a little variable, ranging from "that's sort of nice" to "I'm really, really enjoying this". And then in late July the masses were sidelined by a spontaneous project to decide which Haydn symphonies (of the 23 I own) are my favourites.

The other new purchase was a collection of Dvorak's sacred works and cantatas. In Dvorak's case the Stabat Mater was a real standout, a work whose first couple of movements in particular made a deep impression with their drama and feeling. The Spectre's Bride, a work of similar length, also made some impact though I was rather distracted by an English translation that rhymes. The Stabat Mater translation rhymes too, but in that case I had access to other translations of the same text. Why people feel the need to translate in rhyme and risk distorting the meaning of the original, I don't know. And for The Spectre's Bride the English rhyming scheme doesn't even match the Czech one. How pointless!

Also worth mentioning is that my Chopin listening reached some late masterpieces. The Barcarolle in particular has always seemed one of his great works, but the Polonaise-Fantaisie and the final pair of Nocturnes are also very fine. They point to new levels of sophistication that, sadly, Chopin did not live long enough to pursue much further.

Monday, 26 September 2016

Popular Music - July 2016

Tori Amos - Strange Little Girls
Tori Amos - Scarlet's Walk
Beyonce - Lemonade
Toni Childs - House of Hope
Paul Dempsey - Everything Is True
Paul Dempsey - Strange Loop
FKA twigs - EP1
Jars of Clay - The Eleventh Hour
Elton John - Tumbleweed Connection
k d lang - Invincible Summer
John Mayer - Born and Raised
Joni Mitchell - Mingus
Over the Rhine - Ohio
Radiohead - The King of Limbs
Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool
REM - Automatic for the People
Something for Kate
  • Beautiful Sharks
  • Echolalia
  • Desert Lights
  • Leave Your Soul to Science
Washington - Insomnia


Right. Having left this post lingering in draft mode for far too long, I'm going to dispatch it fairly quickly. I did listen to a much greater variety of pop music than I had in the previous couple of months, though in truth it's not quite that various in terms of how many artists I listened to.

July was the month that I got hold of a physical copy of the new Radiohead album. And at first, my reaction was mixed. I felt that it has a strong start, but I wasn't entirely sure whether the mellow feel of the album was a good thing or whether it was a bit monotonous.

Over a few more listens I came to appreciate the album more, which was no real surprise because that's what happens with most music. Familiarity with the songs means picking out the details and the distinctions. It's not yet at the point where I would rank it highly among Radiohead albums, but I've certainly enjoyed listening to it.

The other feature of the month was Paul Dempsey's new album, Strange Loop. Which led to a general binge of listening to Paul Dempsey both in solo form and as the lead of Something for Kate. It didn't take long at all for me to really start enjoying this album, with a couple of standout songs lodging themselves in my brain very quickly.


The singles are all standouts, with the first single "Morningless" being one of the most driving songs (um, no pun intended) of Dempsey's solo work, closer to Something for Kate than usual.

But on the whole it's the quieter, moodier songs on the album that have real magic. Dempsey now seems to have a very strong understanding of how to use a palette of sounds to create a mood.

And the song that I couldn't stop playing over and over, and completely failed to get tired of, was "Idiot Oracle". It floats so delicately, avoiding all square rhythms. "Morningless" avoids square rhythms too, as indeed is the case for many of Dempsey's songs, but where that one is neurotic, "Idiot Oracle" is light and air.