Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Elizabeth Farnum. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Elizabeth Farnum. Mostrar todas las entradas
domingo, 25 de octubre de 2020
viernes, 29 de julio de 2016
Elizabeth Farnum / Margaret Kampmeier KAIKHOSRU SHAPURJI SORABJI The Complete Songs for Soprano
Son
of a Spanish-Sicilian mother and a Parsee father, Sorabji was celebrated
for his polemical outbursts and opinions. Yet beneath the mask of his
extravagance (‘Ravel, like Alexander Pope, is full of cocktail
cretinisms’) he possessed a penetrating, witty, if frequently
mischief-making, mind. Musical aphorisms (the final Arabesque on
this delectable disc) alternate with works lasting several hours and his
writing can be so intricate that it spreads its tendrils over as many
as seven staves. Small wonder that it is only recently that Sorabji’s
mysterious star has started to shine.
Remarkably, Elizabeth Farnum and Margaret Kampmeier’s disc of the complete songs for soprano
and piano is a world première recording and it would be hard to imagine a
more persuasive case made for music too often dismissed as a specialist
taste. The majority of the songs are in French – some are in English –
and both artists declare their labour of love in every spine-tingling
bar. The influence of Debussy is paramount in the earliest songs.
‘Crepuscule de soir mystique’ from Trois poèmes, for example,
remembers the Etude ‘Pour les quatres’, while ‘Pantomime’ from the same
set recalls the same composer’s magical setting of Verlaine’s Green. Chrysilla plunges from assurance to despair while L’heure exquise lovingly reworks ‘La lune blanche’ from Fauré’s La bonne chanson.
Poems that take a Swinburnian excess to extremes (‘the wild rose covers itself in the perfumed blood of its dye/And that the virgin, blushing with happiness,/Brings her crown and her heart to the arms of her beloved’), and the darkness of L’étang, are somehow magically cleansed of self-indulgence by both artists, such is their style and refinement.
Poems that take a Swinburnian excess to extremes (‘the wild rose covers itself in the perfumed blood of its dye/And that the virgin, blushing with happiness,/Brings her crown and her heart to the arms of her beloved’), and the darkness of L’étang, are somehow magically cleansed of self-indulgence by both artists, such is their style and refinement.
Elizabeth
Farnum is a richly versatile singer who offers heartfelt thanks to all
who made this very demanding and elusive project possible and it is no
surprise to find that Margaret Kampmeier won the 1995 Naumberg Chamber
Music Award. Both artists sing and play as one and they have been
beautifully balanced and recorded. It would have been good to have the
original French poems printed alongside Charles Hopkins’ more than
helpful translations but any possible complaint in that department is
balanced by an outstanding essay by Alistair Hinton, curator of The
Sorabji Archive. (Bryce Morrison / Gramophone)
lunes, 2 de junio de 2014
Nico Muhly / Owen Pallett / Bryce Dessner / Shara Worden DAVID LANG Death Speaks
Death is present in so many of Schubert's lieder, and those appearances provide the starting point for the five songs that make up David Lang's Death Speaks. Lang went through the 600-plus texts that Schubert set, extracting all the lines that are either attributed explicitly to death, or to characters representing him, translating them "roughly" into English and creating lovesong-like lyrics. The settings are wonderfully spare and insistent, with accompaniments from guitar, piano and violin. Shara Worden, lead singer of My Brightest Diamond, is the vocalist, recorded in a close perspective, while the other work on the disc, Depart, offers a very different kind meditation on death. It was commissioned to be played in a French morgue, a peaceful setting in which the bereaved could see their loved ones for the last time. A sequence of slowly changing drones for wordless women's voices and cello, makes the perfect foil for Lang's naggingly memorable songs. (Andrew Clements / The Guardian)
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