The Spirit And The Maiden
This is the debut recording for the Muses Trio, and the
performers are to be congratulated on choosing such an imaginative programme. In
the past few years, I have reviewed a number of debut recordings by trios who
have opted for the standard repertoire, doing neither themselves nor the
listening public any favours. None of that here, as three of the works are world
premieres, and the Kats-Chernin, which gives the CD its title, gets its first
commercially available recording. Further, they have chosen to offer an extra
track – the Beach Romance – which presumably overfilled the disc; all this with
crowd funding.
The Spirit and The Maidenwas written for the Macquarie Trio, and I
heard it performed a few years later by that trio’s pianist Kathryn Selby with
her new trio, TriOz. It is a quite wonderful work, and I despaired of ever
hearing it on record. It is inspired by a Russian fairy-tale, of a young girl
who encounters a spirit in the form of a beautiful young man at the village well.
I won’t spend any more words on the story, suffice to say that it doesn’t end
happily. The music portrays the drama, passion and tragedy of the story
perfectly.
The other really outstanding work bookends the CD. I hadn’t heard Jennifer
Higdon’s two-movement trio before: clearly my loss. The Pale Yellow movement is
gentle and meltingly lyrical, and Fiery Red is certainly fiery and dramatic. I
can’t say that the music summons up those colours for me, but as a piece of
music, it is a cracker. It has been recorded by Naxos (review) with a rather
stellar ensemble including Anne Akiko Meyers and Alisa Weilerstein.
To say that these two works are outstanding should not be read as downplaying
the others, because there isn’t a weak work on the recording.
Judith Bingham’s work also deals with water, but real locations this time.
Chapman’s Pool is a cove on the Dorset coast of England, and Bingham evokes the
changing moods of the sea. It is the most “difficult” of the works presented
here, though certainly not inaccessible, just sparing in its use of melody. I
didn’t warm to it, but I can certainly see the quality.
Nadia Boulanger’s pieces for cello and piano - more intelligent programming,
giving us variety - are deliciously French, and make one wish that her time had
not been so completely dominated by teaching, and that a little more could have
been found for composing. The Kaprálová Elegy, written a year before her death
of tuberculosis, packs a lot of punch in its less than three minutes. In the
bonus Romance, provided in wav format, I found the violin’s sound a little thin
and certainly not warm enough for this type of music. It may be that this was
the reason it was not included on the CD itself.
The three world premiere works by contemporary Australian composers are all
enjoyable. The Kate Neal work, written as soundtrack for a short film reminded
me of Arvo Pärt’s Spiegel im Spiegel, while the Elton Tango, written
for the Muses Trio, arose from her time in New York City, but most of all,
recalls the tangos of Piazzolla. The Boleros by Louise Denson were originally
written as part improvisations for her jazz ensemble, and have made a smooth
transition to classical piano trio.
The three performers have p national and international credentials, and
their work here is very good, committed and passionate. I commented on the
violin sound in the Beach, and there were other times when the string timbre was
a little grainy for my liking, enhanced by a somewhat dry acoustic. Notes are
mostly thorough, though there were instances, the Higdon for example, where I
would have liked to have known more about the music in addition to the
biographical material.
David Barker