
About a year ago, on a whim, and thanks to now defunct Amazon Add-ons, I picked up Sofya Melikyan's concept disc called
Women. The concept is that a female pianist plays works by four female composers. Melikyan selected works by two biggish names - Gubaidulina and Saariaho - to anchor her disc, and it was and remains a knockout, musically, pianistically, and sonically. What were and are the odds that something similar could happen again? (I mean from another pianist, of course; last year, Ms Melikyan performed eleven works by eleven Spanish female composers at a festival in Spain. It's kinda her thing.) Well, pianist Mary Kathleen Ernst, Juilliard alum and friend of contemporary composers, had done something similar a few years before by recording a disc of seven works by seven female composers, and in some cases, the composers themselves provide brief descriptions of the works on offer. The big name here is Jennifer Higdon, though for me, Vivian Fung served as the biggest draw. Well, the $1.10 price tag for the disc served as the biggest draw, so I just had to snag it. At that price, it can be good or bad and it doesn't matter.
Vivian Fung's
Keeping Time gives the disc its title and opens it. It's an extended etude mixing steady accompaniment and varying staccato right hand playing that sort of emulates a gamelan orchestra. It makes for a solid opener. Jennifer Higdon's
Secret and Glass Gardens offers a stark contrast in that it is a slow, introspective, meandering piece, like a musical stream of consciousness. Katherine Hoover's
Dream Dances comes next, and it represents a qualitative step up. Fairly brief, it moves through various dance themes, with a premium on rhythmic and dynamic control. It sounds vaguely French, meaning Debussy married to lighter Messiaen, with hints of Ned Rorem tossed in. I would not mind at all if other pianists took up this piece. Jing Jing Luo's very Stravinsky-meets-Ligeti
Mosquito follows. At times jittery and almost spastic music filled with little ostinatos depicts a modernist rendition of an insect. Not bad.
The big work follows, Judith Shatin's
Chai Variations, which clocks in at almost twenty-one minutes. Sort of aleatoric in that the pianist can play the variations in any order, the piece is based on
Eliahu HaNavi, with the theme sounding vaguely Handelian, before moving into almost Brahmsian variations. I mean Handelian and Brahmsian very loosely, as those are the first names that popped into mind; make no mistake, the music is a modern theme and variations on something ancient, and it carries some real weight. The variations each have plain English descriptive titles ('Sly', 'Pensive', 'Tender', etc), and both composer and pianist do a fine job of evoking the titles. Some of the pianistic effects, like the layered trills in 'Shining', beg for a bona fide Big Name pianist to take up the work. Whether the piece ever makes it as a recital staple is unknown, but it should.
The next big work follows,
Spontaneous D-Combustion by Stefania de Kenessey, in bleeding chunk form. The complete work is a concerto in seven movements, all in D Major, for various instruments and again the movements can be played in any order. The three movements here take up sixteen-ish minutes and though modern in conception, the music is unabashedly tonal and neoclassical and light and fun. The Vivace e giocoso lives up to its title in a tuneful manner, as does the strikingly beautiful Molto tranquillo that follows. The ending Vivace is a light but motoric Toccata which seems to quote or allude to works by Prokofiev and Grieg, as well as some folk music (or something that sounds like folk music). Nice, if not Shatin nice.
The disc closes with
A Recollection by Nancy Bloomer Deussen. It's a brief, simple, lovely reminiscence of childhood, evoking wistful memories in the composers and potentially feelings of the same in the listener. It makes for a gentle close.
Overall, Melikyan's disc is more to my liking, not least because the pianist comes across as more of a pianistic heavyweight, but this disc works better than anticipated. The paltry price tag makes it a steal.
Sonics are efficient, if not SOTA, and the Steinway sounds like a Yamaha more than a little of the time.