George Perle sites 
                http://georgeperle.com/ 
                
                http://www.americancomposers.org/millen1.htm 
                 
              
George Perle was born 
                in Bayonne, New Jersey. Between 1935 
                and 1938 he studied at DePaul University. 
                He taught at the Juilliard for many 
                years. The Berg Lyric Suite had 
                a revelatory effect on him. While his 
                music employs dissonance it manages 
                to be neither obscure nor difficult. 
                He aims to be accessible to his audience. 
                The evidence of this album bears out 
                his intention. 
              
 
              
Bridge's body of contemporary 
                music recordings is one of the treasures 
                of the catalogue. Their recordings always 
                evince exalted musical values and resiliently 
                challenging connections within the world 
                of composers and performers. Bridge's 
                unflinchingly 'modern' twentieth century 
                series includes Crumb (10 CDs), Machover 
                (3CDs), Wernick, Wuorinen, Carter, Ruders 
                (4 CDs), Wolpe (4 CDs), Jaaffe (2 CDs), 
                Lansky, Riegger, Feldman, Harbison, 
                Imbrie, Schuller, Davidovsky, Musgrave 
                and Ferneyhough. They have made a difference. 
                Long may the label flourish. 
              
 
              
Good to hear from Horacio 
                Gutiérrez again. He made quite 
                an impact with the standard repertoire 
                in the 1970s and then sank from sight. 
                Here he tackles the Bagatelles: 
                gently dissonant angular fragments scampering 
                and slowly stalking but often speaking 
                of irritation or impatience among the 
                many quicker pieces and but more dreamy 
                and expressionist in the case of 3 and 
                8. Jumping back in time from 1999 to 
                1962 the Three Inventions for solo bassoon are gawky, 
			  busy and, oddly enough, quite romantic - nothing difficult 
                here. Shirley Perle plays the Adagietto 
                for solo piano is Perle in dreamy 
                Pierrot mode and uses the HESS notes 
                of the dedicatees Margaret and Philip 
                Hess. The Two French Christmas Carols 
                are sung in English - from translations 
                done by the composer. These are without 
                dissonant distractions and one can imagine 
                them being a strong draw for The King's 
                Singers or The Swingle Singers. The 
                Triptych for violin and piano 
                is another matter altogether. It's from 
                2002. It was written for Curtis Macomber 
                who plays here. The three pieces are 
                serious, fantastic and dissonant yet 
                never losing a sense of continuous line 
                and horizontal progress. Brief Encounters 
                is a full-scale string quartet - 
                Perle's ninth - comprising fourteen 
                segments arranged in three groups. It 
                is a work of opulent dissonance, transparent 
                instrumentation and just as serious 
                Triptych. The virtuosic and impassioned 
                DePaul Quartet is led by Ilya Kaler 
                who has recorded for Naxos. The quartet 
                was written for DePaul University Vincentian 
                Community in DePaul's Centennial year. 
                The Piano Concerto No. 2 is in 
                three movements and this version of 
                the recording was first released on 
                Harmonia Mundi HMU 907124. It is a work 
                of angular dissonant fantasy often pursued 
                at speed. This carries over into the 
                Serenade No. 3 except that its spirit is more blithe - just as angular 
                and dissonant but somehow lighter of 
                heart, more jazzy, more redolent of 
                Stravinsky. The Elegy movement 
                (III) was written in memory of Balanchine. 
                The Solo Partita from 1965 has Macomber changing his solo 
			  instrument from one movement to the next: viola - violin - viola - 
			  violin - violin. 
                Perle pays tribute to baroque antecedents 
                but filtered through the gauze of dissonance. 
                This is one of a number of works written 
                for unaccompanied instruments between 
                1942 and 1965. The Celebratory Inventions 
                picture friends within - Krenek 
                at 85, Dutilleux at 80, Knussen at 40, 
                Schuller at 70, Richard Swift at 60, 
                Bernstein at 70. They're all short and 
                concentrated and are related to the 
                character of the Bagatelles. The Bernstein 
                piece has subject's jazzy sway. BassoonMusic 
                has Perle returning to his cantabile 
                serenading style of the early 1960s. 
                The String Quintet is the earliest 
                work here. Written in a noticeably 'modern' 
                style - for the times - with Bergian 
                dissonance it is a passionate, serious 
                and searingly impressive piece, gritty 
                with tragedy. The Quintet was written 
                in memory of Perle's first wife, Laura 
                Slobe who died of cancer in 1952. 
              
 
              
Accessible and communicative 
                dissonant music. A generous conspectus 
                of Perle's work supported by sound and 
                well designed liner notes. 
              
Rob Barnett