Composed by Joseph Schwantner
with Boston Musica Viva , Bruce Coppock , Paula Robison , Marcus Thompson , William Wrzesien
2. Consortium IV for winds, strings & percussion ("In Aeternum")
Composed by Joseph Schwantner
with Dean Anderson , Paul Birttan , Paul Birttan , Paul Birttan , Paul Birttan , Paul Birttan , Boston Musica Viva , Nancy Cirillo , Nancy Cirillo , Nancy Cirillo , Jay Humeston , Jay Humeston , William Wrzesien
3. Largo, for violin, clarinet & piano, S. 73 (K. 2B8)
Composed by Charles Ives
with Boston Musica Viva , Nancy Cirillo , William Wrzesien , Evelyn Zuckerman
4. O King, for voice, flute, clarinet, violin, cello & piano
Composed by Luciano Berio
with Boston Musica Viva , Paul Brittan , Elsa Charlston , Nancy Cirillo , Jay Humeston , William Wrzesien , Evelyn Zuckerman
5. Synchronisms No 3 for cello & electronic sounds
Composed by Mario Davidovsky
with Boston Musica Viva , Jay Humeston
6. Ludus II for flute, clarinet, violin, cello & piano
Composed by Donald Harris
with Boston Musica Viva , Paul Brittan , Nancy Cirillo , Jay Humeston , William Wrzesien , Evelyn Zuckerman
Boston Musica Viva Plays...,Bruce Coppock,Jay Humeston,William Wrzesien,Luciano Berio,Mario Davidovsky,Donald Harris,Charles Ives,Joseph Schwantner,Boston Musica Viva,Paul Birttan,Paul Brittan,Paula Robison,Dean Anderson,Evelyn Zuckerman,Elsa Charlston,Marcus Thompson,Nancy Cirillo,Delos Records,Chamber,Chamber Music,Classical,Classical Artists,Classical Music,Electronic/Computer/Tape Music,Mixed Chamber Ensemble with Keyboard,Orchestral,Orchestral Music,Solo Voice(s) and Small Ensemble,Vocal
Average customer rating:
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Boston Musica Viva Plays...
Manufacturer: Delos Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000006U3 Release Date: 1992-12-14 |
Tracks:
- Consortium I.
- In Aeternum (Concortium IV.)
- Largo
- O King
- Synchronisms No.3
- Ludus II.
Customer Reviews:
Chamber Music from the Academy.......2001-02-17
Six pieces are featured, and of them two pieces epitomize the rather hard-to-love uncompromising aesthetic stance of the times: the first work on the disc by Joseph Schwantner, Consortium I (an early work, written when he was 20) and the last work, Ludus II by Donald Harris. Both pieces are scored for a quintet of mixed instruments and are unrelenting in their approach. Characterized by flurries of activity alternating with moments of relative stillness, the angular polyphony yields little for the average listener in the way of melodic line and nothing of traditional harmonic motion. Mario Davidovsky's Synchronisms #3 for Cello and Tape, in an amazing performance by cellist Jay Humeston, is similarly difficult, but the timbral variety and interaction between the cello and the electronic sounds and the astonishing virtuosity of Humeston provide a richer aesthetic reward.
Schwantner's In Aeternum (Consortium IV) was composed three years after his Consortium I, and demonstrates a greater maturity and accessibility. Although much of the work is still angular, polyphonic and difficult, some contrasting passages are stunning in their beauty. This effect is achieved though unusual tone colors (especially crystal glasses and water gongs) and slower, simpler harmonic structures. Schwantner's success owes much to George Crumb, but interestingly this work predates by three years Crumb's more well-known Dream Sequence (Images II), which shares similarly remarkable timbral and harmonic ideas.
Rounding out the disc are two short pieces which allow some relief from the works mentioned above. Berio's O, King, a piece which is more well known in its orchestrated and expanded version as the third movement of his remarkable Sinfonia, is here given a rather passionless performance. Although the work includes a singer, to call it a song would be incorrect. The text of the piece is made up solely of the phonemes of Martin Luther King's name, and the singer is simply an equal to the other instrumentalists in the slow accumulation of activity and texture the piece presents. Having heard it in live performance, and having conducted it before, I know that it can be a very powerfully moving work. It seems that the Boston Musica Viva let down their guard because of its relative simplicity, and the piece suffers as a result. Charles Ives' Largo for clarinet, violin and piano is the most accessible piece on the disc, and curiously the least rewarding. Like much of Ives' music, this is more an idea of structural juxtaposition than a finely wrought work with refined details. As such it has some historical interest, and does make a significant contrast (too much so, in my opinion) with the other works on this recording; but doesn't call for repeated listening.
Track Listings:
- C.P.E. Bach: Quartet In D/Sonata In C/Sonata In A/Trio Sonata In C
- Canticum Canticorum
- Complete Collection of Opera Recordings, Vol. 2
- Complete Works for Organ 1
- Concerti for Two Harpsichords / Krebs - Schaffrath - Bach
- Daniel and the Lions
- David Oistrakh Plays Violin Sonatas By Beethoven & Mozart
- Deon Nielsen Price: To The Children of War; Diversions; Crossroads' Alley Trio; L'Alma Jubilo; Big Sur Triptych; Hexa
- Dream Time: Chamber Music 3
- Dvorak & Saint-Saens: Cello Concertos, etc
Track Listings
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