Tom CIPULLO (b.1960) 
              
              Why I Wear My Hair Long [1.21] 
              Saying Goodbye [2.08] 
              The Pocketbook [4.24] 
              How To Get Heat Without Fire [4.48] 
              Lori LAITMAN (b.1955) 
              
              The Hour [2.12] 
              Money [1.52] 
              Lee HOIBY 
              Manners [3.06] 
              Filling Station [3.38] 
              Insomnia [3.38] 
              Melanie MITRANO	 
              Your Little Voice [1.48] 
              Time for Tea [2.05] 
              Bona Petite [3.17] 
              Beth ANDERSON (b.1949) 
              
              Lullaby [1.37] 
              Beauty Runs Faster [0.40] 
              Gene PRITSKER 
              Perirrhanterium [3.06] 
              Allan JAFFE 
              We Are Never Alone [3.36] 
              Paul MORAVEC (b.1957) 
              
              I Could Call You Up [3.11] 
              Main Street USA [3.44] 
              David DEL TREDICI 
              (b.1937) 
              New Year’s Eve [4.07] 
               
              
For those who admire 
                contemporary poets, living composer-pianists 
                and adventurous stylistic cross-currents 
                this disc may prove attractive. The 
                focus is American, the composers a mix 
                of well known (Moravec, Del Tredici), 
                increasingly fêted (Laitman) and 
                more obscure (Cipullo, Hoiby, Jaffe 
                amongst them). The singer is also a 
                composer and proves venturesome in accommodating 
                these differing musical perspectives 
                – art, stage, jazz – into her performances 
                and in enlisting a number of the composers 
                to add their imprimatur by accompanying 
                here. For the record we hear Cipullo, 
                Laitman, Hoiby, Moravec and Del Tredici. 
                Soprano Melanie Mitrano doesn’t manage 
                to do a George Henschel and accompany 
                her own singing of her own songs. 
              
 
              
Her diction is very 
                good – some American sopranos of far 
                greater repute would do well to listen 
                to her – and her consonants are crisp 
                and decisive. Her instincts are finely 
                honed and everything she does sounds 
                appropriately musically. This is no 
                trudge through indigestible settings. 
                None of the composers cleave to the 
                far-out or to audience-baiting asperities. 
                Cipullo writes an amusing setting of 
                The Pocketbook (even shouting 
                out from the keyboard) but reserves 
                greatest weight for the most harmonically 
                complex setting, How To Get Heat 
                Without Fire which is also the darkest 
                textually and takes the singer very 
                high. I’ve reviewed Lori Laitman’s two 
                Albany discs on this site and the brace 
                here are new to me; Money is 
                a decidedly theatrical affair and one 
                can imagine it off-Broadway. 
              
 
              
Lee Hoiby does well 
                to set Elizabeth Bishop, an iconic American 
                poet but a difficult one to set successfully. 
                He catches the interrogative catch in 
                the Filling Station and elsewhere 
                presents a tumbling motif to underscore 
                the fears of Insomnia. Manners 
                is also delightfully clip-clop. I’d 
                welcome a disc devoted to his settings. 
                Mitrano sets a delightful and very romantic 
                Time for Tea and even quotes 
                the Godfather theme in Bona 
                Petite. Beth Anderson’s Beauty 
                Runs Faster is a vampy 1950s pop 
                number and delicious, though her setting 
                of Auden’s Lullaby ("Lay 
                your sleeping head") is a damp 
                squib, unfortunately. 
              
 
              
Pritsker’s Perirrhanterium, 
                to words by George Herbert, was 
                originally written for "soprano, 
                baritone, two rappers and Samplestra" 
                I know what rappers are but I’ve never 
                encountered a Samplestra. Here the performance 
                is modified for overdubbed two sopranos 
                and there are samples from diverse sources 
                – Handel, Charles Mingus, African drumming 
                and the like. I’d like to say groovy 
                but I can’t. It’s poor stuff. Allan 
                Jaffe’s sole example is from an opera, 
                Moravec contributes a bold show tune 
                and Del Tredici comes on all Liszt-like 
                in his sole song. 
              
 
              
Some misses here but 
                quite a few hits. I think Hoiby is someone 
                to watch. He has breadth and an unpretentious 
                but clever colouristic sense. All the 
                texts are provided, the recorded sound 
                is excellent and the recital very worthwhile. 
                Kudos to Mitrano for this and to Capstone 
                as well. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf