These two works are 
                fast becoming Kancheli repertoire pieces. 
                Mourned by the Wind has been 
                recorded by I Fiamminghi and Rudolf 
                Werthen on Telarc, by the Bonn Beethovenhalle 
                Orchestra under Dennis Russell Davies 
                and by the Georgia State Symphony under 
                Dzansug Kakhidze (Melodiya) amongst 
                others. Simi has been graced 
                by its dedicatee, Rostropovich, on another 
                ECM disc, this time with the Royal Flanders 
                Philharmonic but again with that great 
                Kancheli proponent Kakhidze. 
              
 
              
Both however have not 
                yet appeared coupled, as far as I’m 
                aware, so that this Chandos offering 
                stakes a strong and persuasive claim 
                in that respect. It is vital in pieces 
                such as these that the recording is 
                sympathetic and Chandos offers a spacious, 
                all enveloping sound stage for these 
                two works of enormous communing depth. 
              
 
              
Simi, subtitled 
                Bleak Reflections for cello and orchestra, 
                means "string" in Georgian. 
                It’s a work not far short of half an 
                hour in length and one that needs and 
                demands absolute concentration; inattention 
                will inevitably lead to a feeling of 
                unease with the idiom and a break in 
                the intense connective tissue that the 
                work deploys – it may seem merely keening 
                and sorrowful but there’s a sure logic, 
                both structural and emotive, that underlies 
                it. The cello enters with rather bumpy 
                lines, uneasy and unsure, over a veil 
                of supporting orchestral sound; there’s 
                an outburst at about 4.10 though the 
                skein of the piece remains essentially 
                quiescently withdrawn. A bigger interjection 
                at 6.15 threatens to derail the meditative 
                focus but instead the music becomes, 
                if anything, tinged almost with sentimental 
                gestures. This is abruptly dispensed 
                by a fascinatingly compact conjunction 
                of burgeoning Boogie Woogie gestures 
                (has anyone else noted this of Simi?) 
                and Hitchcockian-Herrmannesque slash. 
                The cello’s shocked response is to ascend 
                into the ethereal heights of the instrument’s 
                register and for the orchestra to venture 
                some vaguely baroque tinged gestures 
                and to ratchet tension with bold percussive 
                writing. Even so the piece ends with 
                quiescent serenity. 
              
 
              
Mourned by the Wind 
                might be known better by some as Liturgy. 
                It’s the bigger work, and has a 
                greater range of dramatic outbursts. 
                Written in four movements in memory 
                of Givi Ordzhonikidze it strikes an 
                immediate impression. The cello’s rocking 
                figures are accompanied by mournful 
                orchestral writing and by some colouristic 
                innovations, notably some fascinating 
                harpsichord sonorities. The outbursts 
                of the second movement are followed 
                by reflective stillness. Kancheli makes 
                use of the piano, coiling the cello 
                over the treble insistence of the keyboard 
                instrument, and unfolding a Larghetto 
                that has a concise chant-hymnal quality 
                to it. The finale is the longest work 
                and bears the greatest brunt of the 
                outsize, sudden and shocking orchestral 
                outbursts. These are grim and unyielding 
                if short – there are tension-fuelled 
                moments throughout, and many moments 
                of stillness and reflection, as if the 
                mind has been becalmed and then with 
                catastrophic clarity suddenly remembers 
                the inescapable realities of disaster, 
                and of death. Once more the consoling 
                end comes as some balm, as an absorption 
                into some kind, at least, of acceptance. 
              
 
              
Ivashkin and Polyansky 
                exert unremitting energy in these works; 
                the fluid and the shocking are controlled 
                with great understanding. To those who 
                seek a coupling of this kind – sorrowful 
                though it is – then this partnership 
                keens with commitment and a bitter truthfulness. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf