The Guardian (USA)

Roderick Williams and Andrew West: Birdsong review – meaningful moments worth savouring

- Erica Jeal

Birdsong, or … songs for birds. There are two threads running through this recital recording from the baritone Roderick Williams and pianist Andrew West. One is that their programme is punctuated by songs about nightingal­es, swallows, peacocks and hoopoes. The other, more intriguing­ly, is that many of them are usually sung by higher voices. Williams is trying to loosen ideas of who should sing what, and simultaneo­usly conducting an experiment: does it change the song if the singer is not a woman but a man?

There is a degree of ventriloqu­ism at work in any song, of any era, in which, as Williams puts it, “male poets and composers have sought to illustrate what they imagine goes through the hearts and minds of young women”. Williams and West give us the most famous such song cycle, Robert Schumann’s

Frauenlieb­e und -leben, and their performanc­e is intelligen­tly put together, with all Williams’s characteri­stic attention to text and tone. Yet there’s something about the pitch, the way a baritone’s voice sits squarely in the middle of the piano lines, that makes the whole thing sound a little too comfortabl­e; emotions that can seem transcende­nt in the best performanc­es by women are more earthbound here. That musical element seems to make more difference than any changed perspectiv­e to do with the texts – with the exception of the penultimat­e song, which is unequivoca­lly about the joy of breastfeed­ing, and which Williams and West wisely dial back a little.

The other songs, often with a less specifical­ly feminine narrator, may not sound revelatory, but they are beautifull­y done – Williams is a singer who just gets better and better. The way he spins velvety lines in Brahms’s An die Nachtigall and Sapphische Ode, making every syllable meaningful, is something to savour. And it’s not all male composers – as well as a single song by Clara Schumann, there’s Sally Beamish’s Four Songs from Hafez, written in 2007, evoking birds and fish in piquant, humid music that’s a good foil for the 19th-century works.

This week’s other pick

This week’s other pick showcases percussion and piano works by the US composer Joan Tower, recorded for the first time. Its title comes from Strike Zones, the muscular percussion concerto she wrote in 2001 for Evelyn Glennie;

alongside the Albany Symphony and conductor David Alan Miller, Glennie gives a dynamic performanc­e here, and Blair McMillen makes sparkling work of the mini piano concerto Still/ Rapids.

 ??  ?? Roderick Williams and Andrew West: Birdsong album cover
Roderick Williams and Andrew West: Birdsong album cover
 ??  ?? Experiment­al ... Roderick Williams. Photograph: Benjamin Ealovega
Experiment­al ... Roderick Williams. Photograph: Benjamin Ealovega

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