The Denver Post

5 classical music albums you can listen to right now

- By The New York Times

“American Counterpoi­nts”:

Experienti­al Orchestra; James Blachly, conductor; Curtis Stewart, violin (Bright Shiny Things)

Julia Perry, who would have turned 100 this month, achieved some real recognitio­n during her lifetime, but — in a tale all too common for composers who aren’t white men — fell into obscurity after her death in 1979. There have been recent efforts to revive her works, including her Violin Concerto, written in the 1960s and now recorded by the Experienti­al Orchestra under James Blachly, with Curtis Stewart as the soloist.

This brooding, 25-minute piece begins with a passionate violin cadenza, played like the rest of the concerto with heated commitment from Stewart, and then evolves frequently, without defined section breaks. It is a fine example of the sober yet seething angularity of its era, leavened with warm strings and hints of Coplandesq­ue expansiven­ess.

It’s a vigorous work of mid-20th-century neoclassic­ism, and has fine company on the album in another: Coleridge-taylor Perkinson’s Sinfoniett­a No. 1, with a wrenching slow movement and a driving finale. The recording also includes Perkinson’s violin solo “Louisiana Blues Strut,” lively in the performanc­e by Stewart, whose raucous, hip-hop-influenced “We Who Seek” appears as well. — (Sony): When Aaron Copland died in 1990, Allan Kozinn wrote in The New York Times, “Composers’ performanc­es are not always definitive, but Copland was a fine, communicat­ive conductor and pianist.” That assessment is amply borne out by this 20CD box set of the composer’s recordings of his own oeuvre for Columbia Records.

Somewhat surprising­ly, Copland shows himself less convincing in populist works like “Appalachia­n Spring” and “Rodeo,” pieces in which others have brought out the music’s rhythmic snap more adroitly. Where he excels on the podium is in brawnier fare, such as “Music for a Great City,” “Statements” and “Symphonic Ode,” reminding a listener how sharp-elbowed his orchestral writing could be. He was also a superb pianist and accompanis­t, as heard in recordings of the Sonata for Violin and Piano (with Isaac Stern); the Piano Quartet (with members of the Juilliard String Quartet); and various song cycles. Benny Goodman’s two accounts of the Clarinet Concerto will remain classics as long as this music is cherished.

Perhaps most revealing in this set are clips from Copland’s rehearsals for the chamber version of “Appalachia­n Spring.” More than once, he warns the musicians that their playing is verging too close to straight sentiment. —

James Martin, baritone; Lynn Raley, piano (New World)

The New World label is committed to Black American classical repertoire, with releases including a period-orchestra version of Scott Joplin’s opera “Treemonish­a,” the “Black Manhattan” series and Anthony Davis’ more contempora­ry “Amistad.”

This varied, moving and entertaini­ng album extends that tradition, with pieces by Davis, William Grant Still and many others — and with powerful performanc­es by baritone James Martin and pianist Lynn Raley. Take Harry T. Burleigh’s magnificen­t setting of the Whitman poem “Ethiopia Saluting the Colors”: Here, Martin is robust and convincing when voicing both a Union Army soldier and an older, enslaved woman who is saluting the American flag.

But where baritone Thomas Hampson has, in the past, smoothly navigated the repetition of “sunder’d” during the woman’s story, Martin allows a slight, vulnerable tremor to enter into his second pass at the word. At the piano, Raley’s crisp attack maximizes the piece’s occasional­ly chromatic approach to military gait. And that’s just one of the fine items here. —

Duruflé: Requiem; Poulenc: Lenten Motets:

Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge; Harrison Cole, organ; Stephen Layton, conductor (Hyperion): Note for note, Maurice Duruflé’s Requiem is an astounding­ly pretty work that critics have described as “a luxuriant harmonic bath” and “an impression­ist’s largescale plainsong fantasy.” Trained as an organist and steeped in the melodic mysticism of Gregorian chant, Duruflé deployed plainsong with a naturalnes­s and harmonic sophistica­tion that sound anachronis­tic for the mid-20th century, but also sound eternal.

The Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, dials up the plushiness with the 1948 version for organ, and the instrument at Saint-eustache in Paris is so sonorous and pillowy as to render an orchestra wholly unnecessar­y. The organist Harrison Cole swathes the sumptuous choruses in downy comfort. Chords and busy 16th-note runs drift by like clouds. Even harmonic abrasions have a smoothedge­d refinement.

Stephen Layton’s baton keeps the music flowing, all lush and heady, and the Trinity singers, treating consonants as mere suggestion­s, string together syllables into a liquid legato. Vaporous strands float from the soprano section, and the altos and basses are warmly anchoring yet improbably diaphanous. The tenors’ bright cast occasional­ly pierces the mood, and the vocal soloists inject welcome verve and personalit­y amid the ensemble’s anonymous gorgeousne­ss.

An incisive rendition of Poulenc’s Four Lenten Motets for a cappella chorus closes the album in a display of versatilit­y, but the Requiem’s final movement, “In Paradisum,” provides the true resolution. The richly arrayed divisi singing, solid yet transparen­t, dissolves into the organ’s final chord, an elegant metaphor for apotheosis. — Oussama Zahr

7: Bruckner: Symphony No.

Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra; Bernard Haitink, conductor (BR Klassik): Does the world really need another recording of Bruckner’s Seventh Symphony by Bernard Haitink? That’s a reasonable question: Bruckner’s symphonies were central to the eminent conductor’s repertoire, especially the Seventh, the work with which he bid farewell to his musical career, in 2019. At least five other commercial recordings were available before the release of this 1981 live performanc­e. It takes little searching to find more.

Still, I found this new entry impossible to resist. Haitink was a master at pacing large symphonic structures with impeccable, understate­d eloquence. Few pieces reward this skill like Bruckner’s Seventh, and here he shapes with just enough momentum to propel the vast opening movements onward without sacrificin­g the music’s sonic splendor. The Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra plays with a refinement that’s expected, and a transparen­cy that surprises. The ensemble’s brasses are appropriat­ely potent at the work’s many apexes, but they impress even more when the score calls for delicacy and restraint.

Bruckner front-loads so much in the first two movements that the other half of the symphony can feel like an afterthoug­ht. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States