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Morten
GAATHAUG (b. 1955)
Musica da camera
String Quartet No.2 Op.31 (1986) [29:43]
Six Songs to Poems by Jens Bjørneboe Op.56 (2002) [14:12]
Piano Quintet Op.59 (2003-04) [28:16]
Tore Dingstad
(piano) (quintet)
Per Anders Tønder (baritone), Ellen Ugelvik (piano) (songs)
Ensemble Bjørvika (quartet, quintet)
rec. Sofienberg Church, April 2007
2L 44 [72:25] |
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Morten
Gaathaug was born in Sande, southern Norway, in 1955. He
studied piano and composition and studied in Bratislava (1981-82)
- piano with Eva Fischerová and composition with Vladimir
Bokes. Further studies took him back to Oslo for piano with
Hanna Marie Weydahl and Jens Harrald Bratlie. He has performed
widely as a pianist and since 1983 has made his mark as a
composer – though a string quartet had been performed earlier
on Slovak Radio during his studies there. Since 1996 he has
worked as a part-time piano teacher in Ski, the town that
awarded him its Cultural medal in 2007.
Gaathaug
is a traditionalist in the good sense. He avoids dogma in
his music. Perhaps he would cleave to the title of one of
Humphrey Lyttelton’s autobiographies; “I Play As I Please.” What
pleases Gaathaug is the absorption of folkloric music into
a broadly romantic sound palette. His String Quartet No.2
was written in 1986. Themes are inter-related throughout
the four movements and moments of almost ecclesiastical solemnity
alternate with looser material, relative unison austerity
with more episodic writing. There’s a fine folkloric drone
in the scherzo – maybe hints of Prokofiev as well, but above
all Norwegian folk influences and touches of Janáček – possibly
imbibed during his Czechoslovakian year. To show that his
adherence to classical models is unashamed he writes a strong
fugally based finale.
The
Six Songs are conventional sounding affairs. Rosen is
couched in late Romantic vernacular, whilst Den evige
slagmark is stormy and military. There’s unusual subject
matter in the fifth of Jens Bjørneboe’s poems, which celebrates
the carousing poet Brendan Behan.
The Piano Quintet is the
most recent work, having been completed in 2004. It too,
like its quartet brother, is a four-movement work cast in
Haydnesque form – an Allegro, a Scherzo, Adagio and Non troppo
allegro finale. It’s actually a more obviously late romantic
work than the Quartet. Passages sound a little reminiscent
of Grieg; even whilst it moves away from this kind of model
it still retains the folk basis that seems to run throughout
Gaathaug’s music. As with the earlier work themes are inter-related.
The slow movement is the heart of it – very warm, with pliant
piano chording. Unashamed romanticism – good to hear. The
finale ends joyfully with the piano snatching a fine tune
to lead his fellows home – lyrical, tuneful music.
I enjoyed my time with
Gaathaug, of whom I’d previously not heard. Doubtless some
people would write him off as a naïve dabbler. I certainly
think a tighter focus in the chamber works would distil his
influences and inspirations to beneficial effect; the half
hour Quartet is too long to sustain its material. But I shall
look out for Gaathaug and his talented confreres on this
disc, who do him proud.
Jonathan Woolf
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