BBC Music Magazine

David Gompper

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Cello Concerto; Double Bass Concerto; Moonburst

Timothy Gill (cello), Volkan Orhon (double bass); Royal Philharmon­ic Orchestra/emmanuel Siffert

Naxos 8.559855 60:19 mins

David Gompper (see Background To…, p75) is composera pianist rooted in traditiona­l forms and practical music-making. This third album of orchestral

works with the Royal Philharmon­ic Orchestra and conductor Emmanuel Siffert forms a kind of diptych with last year’s second: here we get Moonburst (2018, companion to the earlier Sunburst) alongside recent concertos for cello and double bass.

Gompper’s bold orchestral canvases are in an approachab­le transatlan­tic modernist style which explores binary opposites of line, timbre, tempo and so on. Each work utilises matrices derived from mathematic­s’ Farey sequence: a way of ordering fractions that has underpinne­d his structures and imagery for some time, which results here in music of expressive contrasts.

In the concertos, soloist is pitted against orchestra ‘in an attempt to world-build’ that yields highly listenable results, thanks also to the virtuoso commitment of Timothy Gill (cello) and Volkan Orhon (double bass). The Cello Concerto is convention­al fare, exploring divergent material in two movements, volatile then reflective. But its sibling proves more intriguing as Gompper rises to the challenge of the double bass’s relative quietness: imagining three stages of a solar eclipse, correspond­ing sections highlight different kinds of sonic shadow.

Moonburst builds layers of nightsugge­stive material – including hidden homages to nocturnal works by Schoenberg and Debussy – into an eventual climax which is satisfying­ly expansive. There are some lovely translucen­t textures here which could strike gold with a more subtly blended recorded sound. Steph Power

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★

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