Earl Kim was born in 
                California and studied with the Pacific 
                Coast elite: Schoenberg, Bloch and Sessions. 
                Even so he emerged as a determined romanticist 
                with a fastidious and craftsmanly way 
                with the orchestra. 
              
 
              
The concise Violin 
                Concerto is in two parts of which 
                the first is in five segments and the 
                second in three. It has a sustained 
                pianissimo introduction suggestive of 
                some far distant benediction. This mood 
                is picked up by the solo violin in a 
                Chausson-meets-Berg Episode 1. This 
                is followed by a wildly jagged dissonant 
                section for the soloist. Much of the 
                extensive peaceful material can be likened 
                to an amalgam between Mahler's Adagietto, 
                Holst's Neptune and Berg's Violin Concerto. 
                Here is a composer clearly very much 
                at home with beautiful tonal sounds 
                that sometimes tip modestly into Bergian 
                atonalism. At times the music is dependent 
                for its effect on repetition. The work 
                ends with well-judged dramatics. Arzewski 
                gives an admirable performance and is 
                unflinchingly recorded. The work was 
                written for Perlman but I would be surprised 
                if his performance was more impressive 
                than this one. 
              
 
              
The even shorter Dialogues 
                for piano and orchestra are from 
                two decades before the concerto. This 
                work bears much more evidence of avant-garde 
                rupture and discontinuity. The fragmentation 
                and juxtaposition of gentle lyrical 
                moments with so much gestural assault 
                is not endearing; nor does it tempt 
                a revisit. 
              
 
              
The last work on the 
                disc is a 25 minute piece for orator 
                and orchestra setting Rainer Maria Rilke's 
                narrative poem: Cornet. This 
                is the same poem set, over a more epic 
                span, by Frank Martin. While Martin's 
                music is dour and granitic Kim's has 
                a light and silvery quality that suggests 
                a Russian miniature painting. Kim here 
                projects a continuously illustrative 
                feeling as if the notes are initiated 
                and spurred at every instant by the 
                poem rather than the music ever taking 
                over an imperious role. With music as 
                the handmaid this is a pleasing way 
                to encounter Rilke's poem in English 
                translation. Memorable is the evocation 
                of the death of the Cornet in a whirlwind 
                of scimitar blades. The overall effect 
                is aided by the Eastern-American accent 
                of Kim's nephew Robert, a one-time actor 
                and now New York photographer of actors. 
              
 
              
The informative notes 
                are by Paul Salerni. 
              
 
              
Kim’s Violin Concerto 
                is the real draw here beside the sterile 
                Dialogues and the passive but imaginatively 
                illustrative Rilke melodrama. 
              
Rob Barnett