Pianist
Eve
Egoyan cannot boast the world-wide fame of her
brother, the great film maker and pretentious opera
director Atom Egoyan. Within the world of contemporary
piano music, however, she is a star of the highest
magnitude.
Her taste, discipline and musicality
are so thoroughly evolved that she has been known
to make believers of new-music sceptics. The problem
is, of course, that most new-music sceptics manage
to avoid her. That being the case, the major record
companies have little interest in her and the lesser
ones not much more. Hence this superb self-produced
CD. (The CBC did issue an Egoyan recording of some
music by Satie.)
The first thing Egoyan did right
was to choose six pieces notable, not only for their
advanced idioms and artistic integrity, but for their
beauty as well in most cases.
Take the opening work, for example.
José Evangelista's Nuevas monodías
españoles consists of twenty-one arrangements
of traditional Spanish melodies and is entirely tonal.
However, it employs no harmony and no counterpoint.
Instead the composer explores, in his words, "a
piano style where register changes and ornamentation
predominate. The goal is to create the illusion that
several voices simultaneously perform slight variations
of the melody on different octaves." You might
imagine that twenty-three monophonic pieces lasting
barely half a minute each would become monotonous.
You would be right only in the sense that a string
of pearls can be seen as monotonous.
Karen Tanaka's Crystalline
finds its beauty in the acoustical properties of the
piano. She describes the music's sound as a "cold,
crystal sound sculpture," and I might add that
for me it evokes a walk across a frozen, starlit lake
on a cold winter night.
The Art of Touching the
Keyboard is more
fascinating than beautiful, no doubt, but
fascinating it is. It is "a single continuous
movement (that) demonstrates the many ways in which
the piano keys can be touched, from the gentlest of
strokes to the most vicious of blows."
Stephen Parkinson's Trail
is made up of twenty minutes of "the simplest
of materials and the barest of textures," as
the composer puts it. It opens with a series of repeated
g-b thirds that are repeated from time to time. The
work is made up of short episodes, conceptually simple,
if hardly conventional. The result is music that requires
not so much the rapt attention of the listener as
a relaxed hearing.
Per Nørgärd originally
wrote Turn for the clavichord. It was one
of the preliminary studies for his Third Symphony
for choir and orchestra. Like the Tanaka, it relies
heavily on the sonorities of the piano, but it is
warmer music, "a declaration of love for the
universal order,"according to commentator Karl
Aage Rasmussen. If sheer, sensual beauty is what you're
after, this is where you'll find it.
Corals of Valais,
the concluding work on the CD, is largely made up
of two-note intervals and single notes presented in
an unvarying slow tempo with a rhythmic regularity
so severe that it first fascinates, then irritates
and finally liberates. It is a fitting conclusion
to a liberating collection of contemporary music.
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