An accomplished performer on the viola, piano, and clarinet, Paul
Hindemith used to brag that he could play any instrument in the
orchestra with a little practice. Over the course of his prolific
career, the German composer proved that he could write for any
instrument as well, and that very notion became something of a mission
for him- to ensure that each instrument had its share of solo
repertoire. Convergent Winds, a new recording from Oberlin Music,
showcases five sonatas Hindemith wrote for woodwinds. It features
performances by a host of esteemed Oberlin Conservatory faculty:
clarinetist Richard Hawkins, pianist James Howsmon, flutist Alexa Still,
oboist and English hornist Robert Walters, and retired bassoonist
George Skakeeny. The works were written between 1936- a time when
Hindemith’s music was banned from performance in Nazi Germany- to 1942,
by which time he has resettled in America. For Howsmon, a longtime
professor of instrumental accompanying at Oberlin, the recording pays
tribute to an exacting neoclassicist whose music has unfairly fallen out
of fashion. “Rather than being a huge innovator, Hindemith took his
inspiration from past eras, and yet he had a really wonderful approach
to it,” Howsmon says. “He took old models and made them look new, and no
matter how wild he gets, you can always find where his starting point
was, and it was always 150 years before. He’s like a master furniture
builder- a total craftsman. There have been others who have done that,
of course, but to me he is the best of them.
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Oberlin Music. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Oberlin Music. Mostrar todas las entradas
viernes, 15 de junio de 2018
lunes, 29 de enero de 2018
Alexa Still EFRAÍN AMAYA Syzygy
Alexa Still credits fellow
flutist Jeanne Baxtresser for introducing her to the music of
Venezuelan-born composer and conductor Efraín Amaya. On Syzygy, Still’s
second release on the Oberlin Music label, she joins fellow Oberlin
Conservatory faculty members and students on six pieces written by Amaya
between 1997 and 2014. Former principal flute of the New Zealand
Symphony Orchestra, Still joined the Oberlin faculty in 2011. She
remains an avid performer in recitals throughout the world, including
the Australian and US premieres of Matthew Hindson’s ‘House Music’- a
piece she also premiered on a 2015 Oberlin Music recording. Syzygy,
which takes its name from a movement in the recording’s opening piece,
means “working together toward
a
common goal.” On pieces for flute and piano, flute and cello, and two
flutes, Still works effortlessly with her Oberlin collaborators. Joining
her are longtime piano professor Robert Shannon, cello professor
Darrett Adkins, and two former standout students in Still’s flute
studio: Aram Mun and Tasiaeafe Hiner. (Arkiv Music)
Suscribirse a:
Entradas (Atom)