Petr Vronsky

  • Splashes of Impresssionism: Music of Marty Regan

     Music of Marty Regan, Volume 1: Splash of Indigo
    Chloe Trevor, violin. Brendan Kinsella, piano.
    Trio Xia
    Julia Fox, soprano. Andrea Imhoff, piano.
    Apollo Chamber Players
    Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra/Petr Vronsky
    Navona Records 6064
    Total Time:  70:07
    Recording:   ****/****
    Performance: ****/****

    Composer Marty Regan may be known to some for his translation of a text on Japanese instruments and orchestration.  His own music tends to combine a bit of Eastern sensibility with contemporary Western art music.  This can be heard in this new Navona collection that pulls together mostly chamber works from across the past couple of decades.  There are works here for piano, a duo with violin and piano, a trio, song-cycle, quartet, and even a brief orchestral work.

    First up is a beautiful work for piano, Riding Through Misty Clouds (2012).  Inspired by the composer’s own musings of flying through clouds, the piece has an almost impressionistic quality.  The opening features a variety of fast passage work and great energy as it moves forward.  This is interrupted by a more chordal reflective section before returning to the opening material.  The work is followed by an equally brief work for orchestra, Overdrive (2005).  A brilliant fanfare, the music has a post-minimalist John Adams quality with gorgeous harmonic writing and wonderful orchestration and color (think Short Ride in a Fast Machine).

    The remainder of the album focuses on chamber works.  Two Movements for Violin and Piano (2005) grew out of Regan’s need to artistically respond to the events of 9-11.  The opening movement focuses on two ideas that represent fate and innocence, according to the composer.  The latter of these is centered around a pentatonic theme which has an almost Asian melodic quality.  The former appears as the work moves to a dark march idea exploring the form of a passacaglia that sort of unravels.  The central portion is quite intense and the final bars have a jazz-like smoky quality harmonically against the high violin thematic expression.  The second movement is a hybrid of musical styles and genres that come together to lift up the many possible avenues to lift the human spirit and provide hope.  The music here returns with great forward momentum and excitement.

    Commissioned by Trio Xia, Runaway Train (2004) is the first of these more overtly influenced pieces inspired by Asian musical styles.  Here the composer notes his exposure to Balinese and Javanese gamelan music with the idea of two melodic ideas that interlock.  This is a sort of perpetual motion idea that parallels that heard earlier in the disc’s orchestral work.  The thematic threads are more traditional with the concept of how the gamelan form being applied to more contemporary compositional style.  The work would make for a fine encore number with excellent dialogue writing between flute and cello while the piano creates an ongoing forward thrust.

    The previous work sets the tone for a 2002 song cycle utilizing the poetry of Tanikawa Shuntaro, a beloved contemporary Japanese poet whose work is often intended for children.  The poems here explore themes of love, play, and nature.  Texts for each poem are included here in the ample booklet which is a welcome touch.  Most noticeable is the almost jazz like reflective style of the piano in the opening moments here, something hinted at in the earlier pieces on the album.  It has to do with these expansive harmonies that lend the music this quality.  The vocal line is a gorgeous florid and lyrical setting of the text, striking by the language itself for Western ears.  At 20 minutes, this is the most substantial work on the album, buoyed by the extensive first setting here, “Kiss.”

    Splash of Indigo (2014) closes off the album.  Performed by the Apollo Chamber Players, it brings the connections in Regan’s music of Asian, here Japanese, folk music, with the sort of Impressionist inflections heard at the start of the album and throughout.  Once again, a couple of thematic threads are used to provide continuity through the composition which tends to also feature these moving dreamscape lines and inflections of different Japanese musical styles.  It is a unique hybrid and makes for a fitting conclusion.

    Out of many of Navona’s releases, this collection of music sampling Marty Regan’s work really stands out.  The art work and design perfectly matches the sensibility of the composer’s aesthetic, while the excellent notes help guide the listener through each work.  Sound is balanced well and equalized so that one is not needing to adjust too much from one piece to the next, though the orchestra track feels as if it could come up just a bit.  Marty Regan’s music is quite accessible and, like other new music releases from Navona, the sequencing of the album helps to gradually move from the most accessible pieces to the more intense and back again.  With its blend of impressionism and Asian sensibility, this composition recital is worth checking out.

     

  • Unique Christmas Compilation

     Dashing: Sounds of the Season
    David Tanner, saxophone; Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra/Petr Vronsky
    Stanberry Singers/Paul Stanberry
    Salt Lake City Jazz Orchestra/Henry Wolking
    Navona Records 6055
    Total Time:  51:04
    Recording:   ****/****
    Performance: ****/****

    Tis the season for a number of holiday favorites to grace the local radio stations.  This new Navona release is certainly worth seeking out for its unique blend of takes on traditional holiday music that pulls together music for orchestra, choir, and jazz ensemble.

    The Moravian Philharmonic bookends the release with several selections of mostly new holiday music.  The one familiar work on the album is Tchaikovsky’s “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” which is a good run through of the piece.  Saxophonist David Tanner has created a wonderfully moving arrangement of Adam’s classic Cantique de Noel which is one of the highlights of this program.  He also composed the opening A Visit from St. Nicholas.  Kerry Stratton narrates the familiar tale and it opens the album with a variety of familiar carols forming the themes of the underscore here.  In essence, we get a perfect medley of tunes here with this familiar story.  Another surprise is a new work by Delvyn Case, Rocket Sleigh, which is a fine orchestral miniature worth considering for a change of pace from some of the more familiar sleigh ride pieces this time of year.  A Christmas Celebration brings the album to a close with an original composition by Timothy Lee Miller that provides some orchestral seasonal music without quoting familiar tunes.  The orchestral portion provides the gentle introduction into a more varied choral program at the center.

    The Stanberry Singers are featured in unique arrangements by L. Peter Deutsch, James Shrader, Christopher Hoh, and Phillip Rhodes.  In each case these are familiar texts (“The Holly and the Ivy”, “In the Bleak Midwinter”) with entirely new musical settings.  They tend to suggest a Medieval/Renaissance feel in their harmonic structures and overall styles.  It makes the texts more interesting again, reinterpreting them.  Breaking up these works is a jazz arrangement by Henry Wolking who conducts the Salt Lake City Jazz Orchestra in “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen”.  The primary tune provides the window upon which we then are taken on a ride where the music becomes more varied with subtle shadings along the way.  It is also a refreshing change from the choral styles placed in the center of those selections.

    Dashing makes a perfect album for classical music fans tired of the same old rehashing of Christmas carols.  The new choral arrangements are often fascinating to hold attention once you get past the fact that the familiar tunes are not there.  The orchestral selections are also good additions to holiday repertoire.