Quite what the name Spoon River means to you probably 
                  depends on your cultural background. For me it will forever 
                  be associated with a piece by Percy Grainger. But for many people 
                  Spoon River will mean Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River 
                  Anthology, a collection of free-form poems which describe 
                  the life of a fictional small town named for the real Spoon 
                  River which ran near to Masters' home. Each poem is an Epitaph, 
                  delivered by the dead person to which it refers. Masters' depictions 
                  of small town life are masterly and mix the everyday with the 
                  rather shocking goings-on which happen in the background.
                In 2004 American composer Lita Grier set five songs. These 
                  were followed by further settings so that the complete cycle 
                  now runs to ten songs, each one setting one of Masters' poems. 
                  Grier sets the songs for high soprano, second soprano, tenor 
                  and baritone, accompanied by piano. Running to some thirty minutes 
                  in length it is Grier's longest work to date.
                Grier's career as a composer is somewhat interesting. This 
                  disc contains songs written by her from 1955 to 2009 but this 
                  time period is deceptive as she was silent for a long time. 
                  Grier studied at UCLA under Roy Harris and Lukas Foss. Her early 
                  songs and chamber music were highly praised, but she stopped 
                  composing as she found herself out of sympathy with the prevailing 
                  serialism of the 1960s. Perhaps also an element of prejudice 
                  against female composers might have been present as well. But 
                  her existing songs and chamber music had something of a life 
                  of their own and in the mid-1990s Grier took up composing again.
                The song-cycle which opens this disc, Songs for Children, 
                  spans this period as Grier started it in 1962 and finished it 
                  in 1999. Her style did not radically change though perhaps she 
                  wrote with a greater degree of control, a stronger touch of 
                  austerity. The Songs for Children set a variety of poets 
                  and the songs certainly do not talk down to the children they 
                  are aimed at. On this disc soprano Michelle Areyzaga brings 
                  fine diction to the songs, emphasising the importance of the 
                  words. Unfortunately Areyzaga's vibrato and rather mature tone 
                  seem a trifle unsuitable for the songs and I would have preferred 
                  a slimmer, more focused voice. But her performances are convincing 
                  and she makes a good advocate.
                Areyzaga appears on the next track, a 1972 setting of Sneezles, 
                  the poem by A.A. Milne. This song raises some rather interesting 
                  points. Grier's style has a rather American feel, think Copland 
                  and Barber and though her songs have a degree of metropolitan 
                  sophistication, the wide open plains never seem to be too far 
                  away. So her settings of classic English texts have a rather 
                  entrancing mix of Old World and New World.
                Not everyone will like this and in the Five Songs from A 
                  Shropshire Lad, which date from 1955, I found that the settings 
                  of the better known poems could not drown out the more familiar 
                  versions. There are a number of other influences here, including 
                  a hint of American popular song! The baritone, Robert Sims, 
                  gives the songs good commitment and a decent sense of line. 
                  In a couple of the songs I felt that the part lay a little too 
                  low for him.
                Songs from Spoon River are impressively sung by Elizabeth 
                  Norman, Michelle Areyzaga, Scott Ramsay, Alexander Tall and 
                  Levi Hernandez. They create a good narrative feel and bring 
                  out the words so that we get a real sense of the characters 
                  addressing us. Elizabeth Norman, unfortunately seems to have 
                  some trouble with the high tessitura of her songs and does not 
                  always sound comfortable. Grier takes the poems at face value 
                  and sets them seriously straight. I felt that there was sometimes 
                  a sly, satiric undercurrent in the poems (and in Masters' depiction 
                  of small town life) that Grier misses.
                The final item on the disc is a set of choral pieces sung by 
                  the Chicago Children's Choir. Here Grier sets poetry by Mattie 
                  J.T. Stepanek, a young man who died in 2004 at the age of 14. 
                  The poems are quite sophisticated and Grier's settings again 
                  do not talk down. In fact the choir makes a surprisingly mature 
                  sound and it was only after my first listen that I realised 
                  that they were a children's choir.
                This is an interesting disc of one of the forgotten voices 
                  of American 20th century music. Whilst these performances are 
                  not perfect, Grier has found a group of fine advocates and all 
                  of the pieces receive strong, direct performances. If the alternative, 
                  tonal pathways of late 20th century music interest you then 
                  do try this disc.
                Robert Hugill