The Denver Post

Russian composer gives classical music swing

- By Seth Colter Walls © The New York Times Co.

Back in 1936, savvy listeners may have sensed that the novelty tune “Rhythm Saved the World” wasn’t only about its nominal subject: the drummer boys who motivated Revolution­ary War soldiers at the Battle of Bunker Hill. No, as played by Louis Armstrong, it was clear that the song’s real subject was jazz itself, and its ability to conquer foreign lands — and other genres — with ease.

This wasn’t bluster. Berlin had already thrilled to fox trots in the 1920s. Stravinsky wasn’t shy about his thirst for jazz. And Parisian audiences, including composers like Georges Auric, received Armstrong with rapture early in the 1930s.

Yet audiences today aren’t often given the opportunit­y to appreciate the global impact of American improviser­s on classical music. Among major American orchestras, the upcoming season features almost no jazz-influenced works — with the occasional exception of a Duke Ellington piece or John Adams’ bebop-tinged Saxophone Concerto. This sad state of affairs has resulted in long stretches of inattentio­n to works like the chamber orchestra version of Mary Lou Williams’ “Zodiac Suite.”

A new album of works by Russian composer Nikolai Kapustin (19372020) is here to remind us of jazz’s reach. Released this month on the Capriccio label, the recording is anchored by a feisty, jubilant rendition of Kapustin’s Piano Concerto No. 4, played by Frank Dupree and the Württember­g Chamber Orchestra under Case Scaglione. In addition to its clear debts to the Russian classical tradition, the one-movement work features passages with rock momentum, and others with the grooving energy of 20th-century pianists like Oscar Peterson.

This makes for one of the most entertaini­ng, putit-on-repeat recordings of a dread-filled year. It’s complex and bravely exuberant music that is also highly accessible: A cadenza, toward the end of the concerto, feels as if driven by Rachmanino­ff-tooled engines in the bass, with a carriage of American blues riding high on top.

“I would say a mix of Shostakovi­ch, Rachmanino­ff, Schnittke and Prokofiev,” Dupree said, describing the elements that Kapustin blends with the blues. “It’s a mix of American-influenced jazz music plus the Russian education.”

As a piano student at the Moscow Conservato­ry in the 1950s, Kapustin immersed himself in the canonical piano literature. But a concert by a visiting American pianist, Dwike Mitchell, in 1959 left a dramatic impression. (The anecdote is recorded in the composer’s book of conversati­ons with writer Yana Tyulkova.) By then, the die was cast: Kapustin’s pieces from then on featured the strong influence of jazz — whether he was writing sonatas, études or concertos.

After decades of obscurity for Kapustin, his cult has been growing over the past two decades, thanks in part to a series of recordings by Marc-andré Hamelin and Steven Osborne on the Hyperion label. Hamelin was first exposed to Kapustin’s music in the late 1990s, from a recording by Nikolai Petrov. “My jaw dropped to the floor,” he recalled recently. “And I thought: What is this? This is really rather incredible.”

“You won’t believe this,” he added, “but it’s true: Googling Kapustin’s name yielded zero results. Getting scores was practicall­y impossible. You had to know the right people. Steven Osborne had preceded me in this regard, and I did get a bunch of scores through him.”

Hamelin’s and Osborne’s versions suggest their own tastes in American music.

While Hamelin’s journey through the Second Sonata reveals his appreciati­on for ragtime intensity, Osborne’s dreamier, moderate-tempo approach shows the influence of Keith Jarrett.

Those Hyperion albums, along with Kapustin’s own reissued recordings, have helped inspire a new generation of pianists that includes Dupree. Now stars on the level of Yuja Wang might play a Kapustin morsel as an encore. But because most of the attention thus far has been on the solo piano pieces, Dupree’s disc with the Württember­g orchestra is particular­ly valuable.

Dupree’s next Kapustin album, already recorded, puts the spotlight on jazztrio interpreta­tions of the solo piano works. Scheduled for release early next year, it features his partners — bassist Jakob

Krupp and drummer Obi Jenne — improvisin­g, while he plays, as written, excerpts from works like the Eight Concert Études.

Though Kapustin had some early experience as an improviser in jazz ensembles, he didn’t make space for improvisat­ion in his notated works. Osborne describes this as something of a blind spot, and on his Hyperion disc, he includes brief bits of improvisat­ion (though he is modest about his own jazz skills).

“It feels unnatural somehow to feel completely hidebound to the score,” he said, in music “which is so obviously trying to give the impression of freedom.”

Such improvisat­ional interventi­ons move this music still closer to American trends. Dupree’s forthcomin­g trio recording brings to mind what composer John Zorn has done with some of his recent pieces: notating a piano part precisely, while setting a rhythm section loose to improvise.

These and other points of connection are waiting to be explored in mainstream American classical programmin­g. It’s easy to imagine a series of concerts connecting the music of Ellington and Williams with that of Gershwin and Bernstein — before venturing into the broader catalogs of global orchestral swing.

“Bernd Alois Zimmermann can write his violin concerto, and have amazing bossa nova grooves in the last movement,” conductor James Gaffigan said. “Or William Grant Still wrote these symphonies that are so jazzy and so well-crafted.”

That litany might also include some of the works of Friedrich Gulda, a star pianist particular­ly famous for his Mozart interpreta­tions, who improvised and composed with an ear to jazz influences. His Symphony in G — a punchy piece that gives pastiche a good name — had its first recording released this year.

And when Gaffigan made his debut with the orchestra of the Komische Oper in Berlin this spring, the program included Gulda’s Concerto for Cello and Wind Orchestra.

“Even the most cynical concertgoe­r has to smile in this piece,” he said.

While American music might have swept the world off its feet last century, the works of composers like Kapustin and Gulda — and the efforts of their contempora­ry champions — might now be able to help return the favor.

“A place like Berlin or New York City, the public needs a balanced diet, not just all Mahler all the time,” Gaffigan said. “We’ve got into some weird patterns, in the U.S. especially. And it’s sad because the American orchestras are so great and versatile, and they can do anything.”

 ??  ?? Composer Nikolai Kapustin.
Peter Andersen/schott Music via © The New York Times Co.
Composer Nikolai Kapustin. Peter Andersen/schott Music via © The New York Times Co.

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