Showing posts with label modern classical piano music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label modern classical piano music. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Amy Briggs plays Tangos for Piano


The tango is of course first and foremost a dance that's accompanied by music with a recognizable loping sort of rhythm. At this point a large body of music has developed around the dance, some sickeningly familiar (think of Montovani), others marvelously crafted gems created where the tango is still a thriving cultural complex (Argentina especially) and still others written by composers who wish to work within the form to forward modern classical expression.

Pianist Amy Briggs shows us on her vital solo piano album Tangos for Piano (Ravello 7808) that, something like the morphing of the minuet movement in the classical symphony to a scherzo, present-day composers have extended the definition of tango to, at its further end, a state-of-mind, a suggestion of the loping rhythmic form in a universe of modernity.

Ms. Briggs performs 22 tango miniatures on the album by a great variety of composers. Some of the works are well-known, such as the one by Stravinsky (which is given a ravishingly poignant expression on the disk), and some are so new the ink has barely dried on the music paper.

The result is a very engagingly superb performance of music that enchants and provokes at the same time.

Amy Briggs has such a clear sense of the phrasings, rhythmic complexities and harmonic-melodic logic of each piece that one is led through the modernistic thicket in ways that affirm that complexity and accessibility can indeed go hand-in-hand.

I am so impressed by Ms. Briggs playing that I am tempted to jump ahead and say that this may well be the solo piano album of the year for me. It's lovely and astounding work. She has the drive and immediacy that the best of the jazz pianists have shown and she brings the music very much alive. Bravo! Grab this one without hesitation.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Idil Biret Plays High-Modernist Piano Compositions


Idil Biret made a series of recordings in the vinyl era that cemented her reputation as a world-class pianist. One of the more unusual ones was a set of high-modernist pieces for solo piano released on Finnadar years ago. It is now available again as part of the comprehensive re-release program put forward by the Idil Biret Archive Edition (IBA). (This is volume three.)

High Modernism peaked in the visual art world as abstract expressionism, color field, neo-geo and minimalism held sway between the early '50s and mid-sixties. It has never really disappeared altogether. Nonetheless the advent of pop art initiated a still-dominant tendency toward the synthesis of "high' and "low" forms, the use of vernacular sources, and the appropriation and transformation of the everyday leavings of industrial modernity. Music saw the peak of the High Modernist form in serialism and other formalist pan-tonal/atonal composition trends, which remained dominant until minimalism and neo-romanticism began a surgence in the later '60s.(The musical version of minimalism was much more eclectic and tended toward the incorporation and appropriation of the vernacular or folk idioms, as opposed to the radical formalism of the visual version in its original incarnation.)

Idil Biret's New Line Piano, which is the Volume Three of the Archive Edition of which we speak in today's review, tackles four lesser known pieces, "Archipel IV" by Boucourechliev, "Cangianti" by Castiglioni and the "Sonata Pian e Forte" by Brouwer. Finally there is "Session" by Mimaroglu, a kind of aural collage of piano, electronics and spoken word. This latter piece breaks somewhat with the high-abstraction of the three other works. More on that in a minute.

Listening to "pure" modernist music has to be one of the more demanding tasks set before the aesthetic pilgrim (other than listening to Wagner's complete Ring cycle more or less back-to-back at Bayreuth). But it also promises the serious listener the transformation of how he or she hears music, if sufficient time and effort goes into the experience. Because much of the music has no clear tonal center, or that center is expanded significantly, one must listen to the tones and sound color elements outside of the typical western harmonic framework. After a time, one simply hears differently, hears more fully, has a heightened awareness of intervalic connections and the sense of music as a sonic adventure.

New Line Piano provides a way into such a form of consciousness, or at least a start. Biret's performances of these difficult works are exemplary and, if I might say so, take on a bravura quality. This is excellent music, very well performed. Perhaps the exception is in Mimaroglu's piece. He was a brilliant but sometimes slightly erratic composer, someone whose pioneering electronic/concret music masterpieces used unusual sound sources ingeniously, but was also willing to take chances and sometimes engage in less successful experimentation in multi-form presentations. "Session" combines some of his electronics with a piano part that is not entirely distinctive, then overlays multiple readings of political and/or self-referencing texts. It doesn't quite work, but it has a charming period-specific vibe to it that is not unappealing. Anyone who already likes Mimaroglu will probably appreciate this piece, even if it is one of his less successful ones.

Here, then, is a collection of now rather obscure piano works. Extended re-listening, however, leads to compensatory rewards. It is Biret at her most extreme, but sometimes rather astonishingly so. Bravo.