Chicago Moves
James Woodward: Gaudete
John Cheetham: Sonata for Brass Quintet
Brian Baxter: A Great Commercial City
Stacy Garrop: Helios
Rob Deemer: Brass
David Sampson: Chicago Moves
Joan Tower: Copperwave
Gaudete Brass (Bill Baxtresser and Ryan Berndt, trumpets; Julia Filson, horn; Paul Von Hoff, trombone; Scott Tegge, tuba
Review By Joe Milicia
Naming
themselves with the Latin word for "Rejoice!" the young Chicago brass
quintet Gautete Brass offers an entire CD of new American music for its first
recording for the Cedille label. All are world premiere recordings, all written
specifically for Gaudete, except for the Joan Tower piece, but this is heard for
the first time in an arrangement with tuba replacing bass trombone. All the
music is engaging, the Gautete are a truly distinguished ensemble, and
Cedille's recording is superlative: a splendid release to greet the new year.
James Woodward's 2007 Gaudete,
the earliest piece to be commissioned by the Gaudete — only three years after
their founding — is brisk with elements of a fanfare: a perfect 3-minute
opening for the program. John Cheetham's three-movement Sonata for Brass
Quintet is in a somewhat traditional mold — the main theme of the opening Moderato
reminded me of a John Williams tune — but it's an extremely appealing piece,
especially with the sense of forward thrust and sheer pleasure in music-making
that the Gaudete project. I must say I liked all three movements equally: the
jaunty Moderato, the warmly mellow
Andante with its featured
trombone, and the more jaggedly syncopated Animato
rondo-finale.
Brian Baxter's A
Great Commercial City is a 6-minute portrait of Chicago, according to
the program notes by Gaudate trombonist Paul Von Hoff. The title quotes a line
from a folk song called "El-a-noy" (i.e., the state) and the music itself "loosely" relates to the song, while the three interconnected sections
portray Chicago's "boldness, independence, and strength." Without a score
I can't begin to suggest just where "boldness" shades over into "independence" and so forth, but I can say that a chorale-like opening leads
to a fugal section (independent lines?) and thence to a final section with
trills and other outbursts that may connote "strength" but are pretty bold
too. Whatever the programmatic implications, this too is a very engaging piece,
brilliantly executed.
Stacy Garrop, a Chicago-based composer who has
been extremely well represented on various Cedille issues, here offers Helios.
As you might guess, it's a portrait of the Greek sun-god, but it differs from
Nielsen's Helios Overtureand
most other musical sunrises by portraying the flaming chariot-ride only in the
dazzling opening half, while the quiet second half represents the sleep of the
sun-god as a golden boat carries him around the River of Ocean back to his
starting point.
Rob Deemer's Brass
could hardly be more succinctly titled, but the real key to the piece is found
in the titles of the three movements. "Bell" features bell-like sounds, with
more single notes early on, more "peals" later; "Mute" of course
features muted instruments; and "Slide" calls for glissandos — not only
from the trombone — along with "mmwah!" effects and other sliding sounds.
I hasten to add that the work is nowhere as gimmicky as this description might
make it sound: there are subtle musical patterns in all three movements. In the
finale I noticed a distorted version of the famous horn theme of Till
Eulenspiegel, and doubtless there are other musical jokes embedded.
In the case of the piece that gives its name to
the whole CD program, I wish Von Hoff's otherwise good notes gave more of a
clue about the composer's programmatic intentions or inspirations. Chicago
Moves is in four movements: "Grant Park," "The Spaghetti
Bowl," "Loop Lament," and "Lake Shore Drive." The first movement is
bustling and energetic, though what it has to do with Grant Park — the
greenery? the music heard there all summer? — I cannot imagine. The second
movement, its title presumably alluding to the notorious intersection of
freeways just south of the Loop, features muted instruments and quirky rhythmic
patterns. The lyric, mournful slow movement could indeed be called a lament,
though why it's located in the Loop remains a mystery. As for "Lake Shore
Drive," on purely musical terms it's an effective finale, though to this
listener nothing about it suggests any stretch of that beautiful but sometimes
exasperating drive. Regardless of program, over the course of its 14 minutes the
work is a musically satisfying short symphony for brass.
Finally, Joan Tower's 10-minute Copperwave
is difficult to characterize in strictly musical terms (at least not without
more information from Von Hoff in his notes, or from the composer herself), but
it's easy to get absorbed by it and its subtly varied repeating patterns. The
title is easier to explain: according to Tower,
"copper" alludes not only to brass instruments but to
her father, a mining engineer, while the "ideas in this piece move in waves
[and] circles." The American Brass Quintet's recording takes the opening
slower, more misterioso than the
more assertive Gaudete, but it is good to have contrasting versions of this
striking piece.
I've found myself wanting to use the word "engaging" over and over in this review, to indicate how both the music
itself and the performers draw the listener in, demanding one's complete
attention, offering sheer delight in the unfoldings of each piece. Cedile's
engineer, Bill Maylone, deserves highest praise for allowing each instrument to
be clearly located in space and displaying its unique rich timbre while
perfectly blending with every other player.
Performances:
Enjoyment:
Sound Quality: