David FELDER
	  Six Poems from Neruda´s `Alturas´.
	  
 June in Buffalo Orchestra
	  Magnus Martensson, conductor
	  Coleccion Nocturna
	  
 Jean Kopperud, clarinet,
	  bass-clarinet
	  James Winn, piano
	  4-channel tape
	  a pressure triggering dreams
	  
 June in Buffalo Orchestra
	  Harvey Sollberger, conductor David Felder. 
	  
 Electronics mode 89
	  PO Box 1026
	  New York, NY 10116, USA
	  
	  
	  
	  The American Composer David Felder (b.1953) is, sadly, neither well
	  known nor widely performed in Europe, despite the fact that some of his earlier
	  chamber works have been presented at many of the top festivals for contemporary
	  music, be it the Holland Festival, Huddersfield, Wien Modern or Darmstadt.
	  
	  In recent years, his writing turned more and more towards big, uncompromising
	  and extremely difficult orchestra pieces with the result that those works
	  are hardly ever played even in the States. Orchestras want to have an easy
	  life and rehearsal time for demanding contemporary works is generally counted
	  in minutes rather than hours. Recently, Felder commented: "My music is
	  very difficult and as I like to say, it is not coming to your town soon."
	  But his time will come and if it is only because great music has always come
	  to light and can not be suppressed. By now, orchestras have learned, how
	  to play Mahler, Ives and, more or less against their will, even Birtwistle.
	  If the big ones want to survive, they will have to learn, how to cope with
	  music that does not crawl on all fours before an orchestra or an audience.
	  
	  David Felder, who in his youth belonged to the tenor voices of the Cleveland
	  Symphony Choir (Music Director Pierre Boulez), sitting right behind the middle
	  of the brass section, and who, simultaneously, ran his own radio station
	  and earned a Ph.D. from the University of California, San Diego, in 1983.
	  His interest in electronics led to his being labelled an electronic composer,
	  which is utter nonsense. For many years, Felder has taught composition at
	  the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he also holds the Birge-Carry
	  Chair in Composition. Since 1985 he leads and directs the Festival "June
	  in Buffalo", a weeklong seminar for emerging young composers; from 1992
	  to 1996 he had been composer-in-residence to the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra,
	  while in 1996 he formed the Slee Sinfonietta, one of the very few chamber
	  orchestras in the USA entirely devoted to contemporary music.
	  
	  His works are published by Theodore Presser; his first CD containing various
	  chamber music had been released on the Bridge Label in 1996, and was
	  named "disc of the year" in chamber music by the American Record Guide. His
	  second CD, released this June on the mode label, confronts
	  the listener with two of Felder´s most complex and outstanding works
	  for orchestra, "Six Poems from Neruda´s `Alturas".(1992-93) and
	  "a pressure triggering dreams" (1996-97) as well as the chamber version of
	  "Coleccion Nocturna"(1982-83) for clarinet, bass-clarinet, piano and
	  4-channel tape.
	  
	  Having listened to those three works over and over I am always astonished
	  that, despite the wide-ranging changes in dynamics and colours, any so called
	  `contemporary´ smack is missing entirely. It is music for the 21st century,
	  true to itself, extremely powerful, honest and full of discovery.
	  
	  "Coleccion Nocturna", the title of a poem by the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda,
	  whose thinking had a profound influence on Felder, consists of five variations,
	  based on a theme from an earlier work. They mirror a kind of electrifying
	  tension as well as a crystallization of emotions, 19 minutes of foremost
	  constantly changing musical perspectives, which despite the technical demands
	  speak with an extraordinary directness. "Six Poems from Neruda´ s
	  `Alturas´.." had been commissioned by the New York State Council on
	  the Arts and the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. In 1994, the work had its
	  European premiere during the Festival of the International Society of
	  Contemporary Music in Stockholm. For this recording as well as for the recording
	  of "a pressure triggering dreams" David Felder was able to use the June in
	  Buffalo Orchestra, dedicated and committed virtuoso players from all over
	  the States and Canada, assembled each year for the Festival June in Buffalo.
	  
	  The result is just breathtaking. Neruda may have triggered the first and
	  decisive impulse, but it is the music, which captivates instantly. Suddenly,
	  the complex compositional structure becomes irrelevant; there is ingenious
	  music in its purest sense, which with its sheer power, aesthetics and depth
	  does not ask any theoretical questions, but wants to be listened to many
	  times. The overflowing evocative tension, the sensual atmosphere, the sometimes
	  depressive, but soon again playful gestures as well as the sublime irony
	  in all three movements breathe an incredible tenseness. Felder combines his
	  deep knowledge of the past and the present with a constant searching on a
	  philosophical, human and musical level - a Gustav Mahler for the 21st century.
	  Those 25 minutes confront us with all the inner dimensions of the human
	  existence. Despite its performing difficulties - originally even Mahler had
	  been rejected as unplayable by certain orchestras - this work earns a constant
	  place in the repertoire of any great orchestra.
	  
	  "a pressure triggering dreams", commissioned by the American Composers Orchestra
	  with the request to incorporate electronics, had its premiere at New York´s
	  Carnegie Hall in May 1997. The full orchestra sound is complemented by a
	  companion `orchestra´ consisting entirely of computer-processed flute
	  sounds, by live sampler keyboards, electric bass and by selectively amplified
	  solo instruments. For Felder, some quotes from Nietzsche´s " The Birth
	  of Tragedy" serve as a kind of mental godfather. But any literal impulse
	  as well as any compositional detail are secondary compared to the overwhelming
	  unfolding of the musical impact - 20 minutes of fulfilled music, which absorbed
	  the past and creates on the basis of an universal view of life new and
	  fascinating energies.
	  
	  This technically impeccable recording, conducted by Magnus Martensson and
	  Harvey Sollberger under the supervision of the composer, should ease the
	  way for David Felder to be heard live on European concert platforms.
	  
	  Hans-Theodor Wohlfahrt
	  
	  
	  
	  
	  See report on Buffalo
	  Festival