Around the world in 80 minutes! Here’s music influenced
by the folk traditions of Peru, Spain, Iran and Uzbekistan, plus a piece
written in Australia and one that contains tributes to Ottoman janissaries
and the French baroque. You’ve probably never heard any of this: it all
comes from the last 35 years. These five composers all have superb voices:
they neither alienate nor condescend to the listener. The Sol String Quartet
is an energetic and powerful ensemble. All in all, I have no choice but
to consider this a potential
Recording of the Year. If you usually
shy from “adventurous” repertoire, stop acting that way and listen to this.
Everything here is fantastic.
The most famous composer on the album is
Lou Harrison, an American
eccentric who looked like
Santa
Claus, studied with John Cage and was fascinated by the folk music of
Java. His
String Quartet Set bears a European stamp, though, with
one movement beautifully developing a medieval German chant, another a direct
homage to “the French Baroque,” and the finale in imitation of Turkish military
bands. There’s also a “Plaint” which the composer wittily summarizes: “We
all complain, at least a little.”
Gabriela Lena Frank is a major American voice in music, and I mean
American in the broadest sense. Her mother is Peruvian and Chinese and her
father a Lithuanian Jew. Frank herself was born and is based in California,
and a formative experience in her life is her travel through South America
“studying the music, poetry, mythology and legends (
leyendas)”.
Leyendas is the name of her string quartet here, which episodically
conjures up images of panpipes, gallant serenades, the crying women hired
to mourn at funerals, high mountain pathways, and in the thrilling finale
“a storm of guitars”. This is a superb introduction to Frank’s art, and
one of my favorite pieces from her so far.
José Evangelista’s
Spanish Garland sets twelve folk melodies
very simply, but not simplistically. Each tune, most of them harmonically
quite surprising, leaps outside our cliché ideas of “Spanish” music. They
are set the way you might hear them from an authentic folk band, with all
the implied roughness, interplay between soloists and complexity. To me
a lot of it sounds Turkish or Moorish, although the final episode, which
comes across as sounds downright Celtic, is obviously from Galicia, where
I heard bagpipes playing on a walk one day.
Reza Vali’s
Nayshaboorák is a superb piece in Persian style
for string quartet — I flatter myself that I know more about Arabic and
Middle Eastern music than the average listener, since half my family is
Turkish and my great-grandmother was a celebrated
oud teacher.
This really does sound like traditional music set with excellent craftsmanship
for western instruments. The performers face, by the way, pretty intimidating
challenges tuning their instruments to mid-eastern scales. Vali apparently
sends ensembles a disc of instructions, here very well-heeded.
The encore is
Fast Blue Village No. 2, by the Uzbek-Australian
composer
Elena Kats-Chernin. There’s a strong influence of western
minimalism here; it’s like the travel diary of John Adams, or Philip Glass
if he’s had some caffeine. By this point I was completely hooked.
This disc offers superb sound, truly state-of-the-art, comprehensive and
very handy booklet notes and an exceptionally adventurous program. It’s
outstanding music, none of it hard to penetrate but none of it cheesy or
pandering. All of it is crafted with great skill. The string quartet’s performances
grow only more astonishing as the CD goes along. If anybody anywhere is
going to release a better, more fascinating album than this in 2013, I can’t
wait to hear it.
By the way: In case someone from the Del Sol Quartet reads this: track down
Slawomir Czarnecki’s String Quartet No. 2, pronto. You’ll love playing it.
For everyone else: find the Opium Quartet recording; you’ll love listening
to it.
Brian Reinhart
Around the world in 80 minutes with five truly outstanding pieces. If anybody
anywhere is going to release a better album than this in 2013, I can’t wait
to hear it.