Some time ago, I reviewed recordings of two short miniatures 
        for clarinet trio by John Biggs (Medieval Dance Suite on 
        CRYSTAL CD942 and Renaissance Bouquet on CRYSTAL CD943). 
        Here is another piece of his, but a much more serious and substantial 
        one. Variations on a Theme of Shostakovich, composed in 
        1978 for the present soloist, is also a deeply felt tribute to the Russian 
        composer who apparently meant much to John Biggs. The variations, on the 
        opening viola theme of the second movement of Shostakovich’s First String 
        Quartet, often inhabit the Russian master’s sound-world with its mix of 
        lyricism, bitter-sweet irony and rhythmic energy, though it is American 
        to the core. A quite substantial, earnest and honest piece of music that 
        deserves to be better known. 
         
        
The French-born Jean-Claude Wolff studied with several 
          distinguished teachers, such as Henri Dutilleux, Michel Philippot, Jean-Pierre 
          Guézec and Ivo Malec, and attended composition classes of Franco 
          Donatoni in Sienna. In spite of some obvious influences from these composers, 
          Wolff manages to remain his own man in his music. The Second Symphony 
          for violin and orchestra (available on VMM 3001) is a beautifully lyrical 
          work bearing the imprint of Dutilleux; but the Symphony No.4 
          of 1985, scored for a small orchestra of 35 players, is a more complex, 
          more stringent work in a rather more austere idiom and less predictable 
          than the Second Symphony. The music draws on dynamic and expressive 
          extremes alternating almost static cluster-like sections and energetic, 
          percussive episodes; but never extravagantly so, for expression remains 
          Wolff’s main concern. This is a sizeable and substantial work that repays 
          repeated hearings. 
        
 
        
Stephen Dembski’s name and music are new to me. His 
          orchestral song Of Mere Being, composed in 1981 and revised 
          in 1983, is actually based on an earlier setting of Wallace Stevens’ 
          last poem written in 1975. Stevens’ short poem may sound rather obscure 
          but its vivid verbal imagery suggests a similarly vivid musical setting 
          which Dembski successfully achieves, albeit in a more advanced, though 
          still quite accessible idiom. 
        
 
        
Barbara Jazwinski, another name new to me, studied 
          with Davidovsky, Ligeti and Chowning. We are not told when Stryga 
          was composed. This piece, though, was originally conceived as a ballet 
          and later developed into a purely orchestral score although the various 
          moods of the music betray their origins drawn from various ancient Polish 
          legends about Stryga which deal with the extinction of prehistoric tribes 
          and, on a more general level, with the stoical acceptance of one’s fate 
          "without questioning the world’s existing order". The work, 
          however, may be experienced as an abstract piece of colourful, evocative 
          and superbly crafted music. 
        
 
        
That good music communicates, whatever its stylistic 
          boundaries, is amply demonstrated by the works in this release, which 
          is one of the finest of this series which I have ever heard. Fine works 
          in excellent performances and fine recordings. What else can we ask 
          for? 
        
 
        
Hubert Culot