Schoenfield’s music 
                has often been noted for its Hassidic 
                aspects though the melancholic elements 
                that co-exist have perhaps been downplayed. 
              
 
              
In his recent Viola 
                Concerto we can certainly hear an aesthetic 
                which we can impute to the influence 
                of Bloch, with a patchwork of melodic 
                strands and some bold rhythmic dance 
                gestures in both solo and especially 
                orchestral lines. To that we can add 
                light but elegantly precise scoring 
                with an especially delightful moment 
                in the central, slow movement where 
                the oboe winds behind the musing viola’s 
                solo - it has an expressive, communing 
                quality that impresses. Schoenfield 
                isn’t afraid to take his soloist up 
                high over the reflective, supporting 
                orchestral tissue. This is warmly romantic, 
                purely tonal and carried off in this 
                performance with considerable aplomb. 
                In the finale there are hints of Shostakovich, 
                and the Hebraic elements are more artfully, 
                less effusively presented than in a 
                contemporary work such as Isaac Schwartz’s 
                Yellow Stars. There’s increasing 
                drama, especially in the Dance of David, 
                with dance patterns renewed and some 
                Klezmer smear as well. 
              
 
              
The Viola Concerto 
                is the major work here but the Four 
                Motets make an individual mark with 
                their reflections on High Renaissance 
                practice, the chromaticism adding to 
                an effect of newly minted traditionalism. 
                The harmonies are at their richest in 
                the second of the four – all are short 
                – and the sense of displaced time, or 
                a sense of time as a continuum, is maybe 
                at its most effective in the last. There 
                are also three excerpts from Act II 
                of The Merchant and The Pauper, his 
                1999 two-act opera. This was based on 
                mystic ideas enshrined in the writings 
                of Reb Nahman of Bratslav (1772-1811), 
                a charismatic leader of his community. 
                The most substantial is the twelve-minute 
                excerpt from Scene 1 – strong romantic 
                lines and sonorous narration, whilst 
                there’s vibrant dance music in the fifth 
                scene. Extensive though the notes are 
                – they always are with the Milken Archive 
                discs – it’s invariably only a partial 
                view of the opera. 
              
 
              
All the performances 
                are committed and the trio of recording 
                locations fortunately doesn’t jar the 
                ear. I found the Concerto the most impressive 
                of the works here – full of Bloch and 
                Shostakovich lineage and attractive. 
                All are premiere recordings. 
              
  
               
              
Jonathan Woolf