Eduard Erdmann was 
                one of the most respected pianists of 
                his generation, and was a tireless advocate 
                of new music. With a circle of friends 
                that included the likes of Alma Mahler, 
                Ernst Krenek and Artur Schnabel, it 
                is evident that Erdmann traveled in 
                an elite circle of musicians, and had 
                a standing equal to any major artist 
                of his day. A composer and a scholar, 
                his music is just now receiving some 
                richly deserved recognition, having 
                fallen by the wayside for the last fifty 
                or so years. He served in at least three 
                important academic positions, including 
                professorships at the Cologne and Hamburg 
                Academies of Music. 
              
 
              
The era of the compact 
                disc and the digital music file have 
                produced a mass of recordings that no 
                one listener could hope to enjoy in 
                two lifetimes, much less in the four 
                score and seven with which we each have 
                to work. This embarrassment of riches 
                leaves us with mountains of discs through 
                which to wade, and not nearly enough 
                time to discover it all. 
              
 
              
This is a disc worth 
                your time to discover. Erdmann the composer 
                works in traditional media with a fresh, 
                original and sometimes dissonant style 
                and harmonic language. The symphony, 
                his last from 1951 is more compact than 
                Mahler, less angular than Shostakovich 
                and less romantic than Weingartner. 
                Lush in texture, yet not syrupy, this 
                is music whose beauty lies in its wintry 
                soundscape. It is not the stuff of sweeping, 
                singable melodies, and yet it is not 
                without melodic interest. Neither is 
                it the sort of episodic paint splashing 
                that we get from many of today’s composers. 
                It is the canvas of a dark impressionist 
                rather than that of a musical Jackson 
                Pollock. Taut and strong, it is music 
                that requires you to listen, and doesn’t 
                let you down for your effort. 
              
 
              
Monogramme, which 
                was the composer’s final work, is no 
                less harmonically challenging than the 
                symphony of four years before, but it 
                is far more playful and far less serious. 
                Its opening movement is wispy and ethereal, 
                energetic and noisy with dissonance 
                and whirling string and wind figures. 
                The middle movement is by turns serene 
                and even melodic and busy with flourishing 
                wind figures. It ends with a swish and 
                a bang. 
              
 
              
The Serenade for Small 
                Orchestra is, as its title would imply, 
                much more jolly and playful than the 
                other works. Yet again, Erdmann never 
                indulges in romanticism or overt melody-making. 
                His is a musical language that although 
                not particularly challenging to twenty-first 
                century ears, must have set a few teeth 
                on edge in its day. His sounds are often 
                biting and the rhythmic figures are 
                unsteady and biting in character. 
              
 
              
CPO have a knack for 
                bringing out recordings of fascinating 
                music by some of Europe’s lesser known 
                orchestras. The Frankfurters play with 
                an excellent sense of ensemble, and 
                employ some extremely fine woodwind 
                players who get a good workout in this 
                music. Israel Yinon is a rhythmically 
                aggressive conductor and he succeeds 
                quite admirably in finding balance in 
                this complex musical tapestry. His attention 
                to detail is evident in the subtle shadings 
                of the solo passages, and the broad 
                dynamic scope that he gets from his 
                players. Yet, balance is again the key 
                word. The loudest passages, while thrilling, 
                are always bearable, and the soft sections 
                are never inaudible. 
              
 
              
CPO displays some carelessness 
                in presentation though, with an annoyingly 
                mismatched documentation between the 
                back cover and the booklet. The movement 
                numbers don’t align. This kind of error 
                occurs with maddening frequency in CD 
                releases and is inexcusable, especially 
                at CPO’s price point. 
              
 
              
Nonetheless, this is 
                a disc worth owning. 
              
 
              
Kevin Sutton