This is the second 
                Phoenix disc to look to the music of 
                Vasks and Mikhail Bronner. The last 
                disc (Phoenix PHCD 153 also reviewed 
                here included violin concertos by Arutiunian 
                (Armenia 88), Vasks Distant 
                Light and Bronner Heaven's Gates. 
                Ambartsumian was the leading light 
                for that disc also. 
              
 
              
Phoenix's latest arrival 
                replaced Arutiunian. with Tchaikovsky, 
                not Peter Ilyich, not André (remember 
                him - he was a concert pianist and a 
                composer!), not Boris but Alexander. 
                Once again he is no relation of the 
                famous Tchaikovsky ..... 
              
 
              
Mikhail Bronner 
                graduated from the Moscow Conservatory 
                having studied with Tikhon Khrennikov. 
                His intense Lonely Voice concerto 
                stands in the triangle between the Walton, 
                Frankel and Schuman concertos. It moves 
                from suspenseful lyricism through moments 
                of plangent atmospheric tension to hammered 
                out apocalyptic violence and back to 
                ellipitical Bergian shadowed singing. 
                This does not sound like a chamber orchestra. 
                The tortured romantic credentials of 
                this work are well worth checking out. 
              
 
              
Alexander Tchaikovsky 
                is a Muscovite composer who studied 
                at that city’s Conservatory with Heinrich 
                Neuhaus and Tikhon Khrennikov, He has 
                composed extensively and there are three 
                symphonies, two piano concertos, operas, 
                ballets (one based on the story of the 
                Battleship Potemkin), three viola concertos 
                (one written for Yuri Bashmet) and two 
                violin concertos amongst many other 
                pieces. The Double Concerto is part 
                of a tragic trilogy. To complete the 
                symmetry the other two components of 
                the trilogy are concertos: one for violin; 
                the other for viola. The concerto is 
                inspired by the irretrievable passing 
                of childhood - that land of lost content 
                and by Nikita Mikhailov’s film Several 
                Days from the Life of Oblomov (after 
                Turgenev). Unlike the Bronner this work 
                is in three movements but like Bronner 
                the language adopted is full of tension 
                both singing and buzzing; try the manic 
                Presto. It also has an undeniable 
                haunted lyricism that seems to sing 
                under threat and with constant and piercing 
                pangs of melancholy. The composer ends 
                the piece most imaginatively with a 
                slender quiet microtonal slide - a sleep 
                and a forgetting. 
              
 
              
This is very apt as 
                the final piece is Peteris Vasks’ 
                Musica Dolorosa for string orchestra. 
                Clearly you will not be buying this 
                disc for light-hearted amusement because 
                as the Latvian composer says - ‘this 
                is my most tragic opus where there is 
                no optimism, no hope ... only pain’. 
                As with all three works on this disc 
                this is serious music concerned with 
                the grand emotions and in this case 
                with grave beauty. Musica Dolorosa 
                is dedicated to the memory of the composer’s 
                sister and was completed shortly before 
                her death. The sustained lyrical string 
                writing carries many original touches 
                threaded among the constant activity 
                of a string orchestra at prayer. One 
                of his hallmarks are those microtonal 
                swervings and slidings. 
              
 
              
The notes are good 
                even if they still fail to provide the 
                date and country of birth for Bronner. 
              
 
              
Serious Baltic and 
                Russian music that is warmly recorded, 
                imagined and played. Challenging but 
                firmly tonal-melodic. 
              
Rob Barnett