Caprice No. 19 from ‘24 Paganini Caprices’ (2003)* [3:07]
Violin Concerto No. 7 (2009)* [14:48]
rec. live, Philharmonic Hall, Odessa, Ukraine, 6-8 November 2013. DDD
In an earlier
review
of compositions by Myroslav Skoryk (or Skorik) I have noted his facility
for writing really memorable tunes often shot through with folk music references.
This disc is further evidence of that. As with that previous Toccata issue
- music for violin and piano - the specific influence of the folk melodies
of the Hutsul people who live in the Carpathians very often dominates these
compositions. You can hear this in first piece which is from his
Hutsul
Triptych which he abstracted from music he wrote for the film
Shadows
of Forgotten Ancestors that I recently saw again. The music is certainly
a vital component of the film though it works wonderfully well away from
it too.
Dytynstvo (Childhood) is disarmingly enchanting and is
the sort of piece you want to hear again immediately.
Diptych is a beautifully written and affecting piece for strings
which for the most part is intensely moving. It deserves greater success
than it has enjoyed since its completion in 1993. It is a perfect short
work for a programme of music for strings and in common with all but two
works here is only now receiving its world première recording. The
same goes for the enjoyable
Caprice No. 19 from ‘24 Paganini Caprices’
which is really a fun piece with more than a whiff of the circus about it.
It would be good to see all of the caprices released on disc since very
few composers have dealt with them all as Skoryk has.
This short single movement violin concerto is his seventh and is also making
its recording debut. There are some wonderful moments in it, some sounding
pretty taxing for the soloist. It has a mix of the wistful with the frantic,
the restrained with the urgent all of it enticing the listener to explore
the other six although to date only the first of them has been
recorded.
Skoryk’s
Melody for strings, as booklet writer Richard Whitehouse
explains, was the piece that “propelled him beyond specialist circles
to the forefront of Ukrainian music” a fact that is easy to understand
once you’ve heard it. Dripping with pathos and longing it is a heart-rending
composition but despite its having been written way back in 1981 and enjoying
such success it has still had to wait until now for a recording.
Another world première recording comes next with his cello concerto
from 1983. It won him the Shevchenko Prize — Krushchev was a laureate
in 1964 for “strengthening culture in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist
Republic”. The concerto is a single movement work whose inner beauty
shines through. The soloist is active from the opening bars, playing without
a break and acting like a sad and lonely voice yearning to free itself from
its surroundings. Sometimes the orchestra seems to be sympathetic to the
cello’s plight but at others appears to act more as its oppressive
captor with brutalising responses to its plaintive pleas.
Spanish Dance from Skoryk’s suite concerning the story of
Don Juan is a convincing and attractive piece of Espaniana - if the word
doesn’t exist it should.
Skoryk’s
Carpathian Concerto for Orchestra has appeared on
disc several times making it one of his most successful compositions and
showing his flair for integrating folk melodies into an orchestral work
that is full of colour. Even the cimbalom makes an appearance emphasising
the work’s folk roots.
As an introduction to the music of Myroslav Skoryk this disc is the perfect
vehicle with so many varied pieces from the purely orchestral to two works
for soloists, both of whom do the works great service. They are played by
an orchestra which has come on by leaps and bounds under its Venezuelan-born
American conductor Hobart Earle who has done so much to raise its status
internationally, so much so that he’s even had a star named after
him, something surely unique in the conducting world?
This is a very enjoyable disc and will whet anyone’s appetite to explore
Skoryk’s music yet further.
Steve Arloff
Previous review:
Rob
Barnett