BBC Music Magazine

Max Richter

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Exiles; Flowers of Herself; On The Nature of Daylight;

Infra 5; Sunlight

Baltic Sea Philharmon­ic/

Kristjan Järvi

DG 486 0445 67:20 mins

Max Richter’s Exiles has been called postglassi­an, but the half-hour work has plenty in common with the early minimalism advocated by Cage and Feldman. The piece features a simple twonote melody that is repeated – with subtle motivic developmen­t – over gently shifting strings. We are over 20 minutes in before there is any real thematic or textural variation; then, the final section sees an explosion of timbral colour, amplified by menacing percussion. After striding around the orchestra, the sparse theme returns to its original iteration. Exiles is Richter’s response to the migrant crisis of 2015 and the cultural impact it had on the composer’s then-home city Berlin (that year, 158,657 Syrians applied for asylum in Germany; the majority of them were approved). The music’s constant pacing is a powerful representa­tion of the plight of refugees. That it is here performed by the excellent Baltic Sea Philharmon­ic – an ensemble of no-fixed abode that connects multiple countries around Scandinavi­a and mainland Europe – is apt.

Movement is also central to Flowers of Herself, which depicts the hustle and bustle described in the opening to Virginia Woolf’s

Mrs Dalloway. The eponymous protagonis­t revels in every ‘swing, tramp and trudge’ in a waking Westminste­r; Richter evokes this activity through an ever-changing pulse – every bar has a different time signature. The piece is a quasi-overture to Woolf Works, the ballet composed for the Royal Ballet’s resident choreograp­her Wayne Mcgregor and is one of five newly orchestrat­ed short works that comprise the rest of the recording. Claire Jackson

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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