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PORTRAITS
PHILIP GLASS
A Musical Portrait of Chuck Close
MAURICE RAVEL
Miroirs: La vallée des cloches, Alborada del gracioso
OLIVIER MESSIAEN
Vingt regards sur l’enfant Jesus: L’échange, Regard de la Vierge; Catalogue d’oiseaux: L’Aloutte Lulu
ERIK SATIE
Sarabande No. 2; Gnossienne No. 4; Gymnopédie No. 1
Bruce Levingston (piano)

Orange Mountain- 0025(CD)
Reference Recording - None for this collection

rating

The concept of musical piano portraits based upon or inspired by specific people or subjects purportedly unites the works Bruce Levingston assembles for this recital. Whether or not Philip Glass' two-movement portrait of his friend, painter Chuck Close, mirrors the latter's visual style in musical terms shouldn't influence your direct response to the composition; it turns out to be one of Glass' most beautiful piano pieces. His trademark repeated ostinatos, scales, and strategically deployed single notes veer off into unpredictable harmonic juxtapositions and polyrhythmic combinations that sit as comfortably as a fun-house mirror. Although Glass' writing often seems built out of modular blocks (musical Lego sets, perhaps), he has an unerring sense of just how long each module should be, as well as how to mete out harmonic density in the right proportions. What is more, Levingston's solid rhythmic sense and astute textural control makes the music seem easier to play than it actually is.

The Messiaen selections, of course, require transcendent virtuosity and a huge arsenal of tone color, which Levingston has. I especially warm to Levingston's Satie, where he creates an illusion of the melody lines and accompaniments stemming from different instruments. Yet I wish he had brought similar tonal allure to Ravel's La vallée des cloches. In the same composer's Alborada del gracioso, Levingston doesn't quite match the assurance and razor-sharp articulation that others bring to the notorious repeated notes and vivacious rhythmic patterns. Incidentally, Levingston's sonority is fuller-bodied and more dynamically varied in real life than the drab, slightly constricted engineering suggests.

--Jed Distler



JOSEPH HAYDN
MICHAEL HAYDN
Jasper de Waal (horn); Jörgen van Rijen (trombone)
Concertgebouw Chamber Orchestra
Henk Rubingh
Channel Classics

THE BALKAN PROJECT
Songs & Dances arranged by various composers, including Carlos Rafael Rivera, Vojislav Ivanovic, Boris Gaquere, Atanas Ourkouzounov, others
Cavatina Duo--Eugenia Moliner (flute); Denis Azabagic (guitar)
Cedille

ALAN HOVHANESS
Trinity College of Music Wind Orchestra
Keith Brion
Naxos

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
Malin Hartelius, Martina Janková (soprano); Anna Bonitatibus (mezzo-soprano);
Javier Camarena (tenor) Ruben Drole (baritone); Oliver Widmer (bass-baritone)
Zurich Opera House Chorus
& Orchestra
Franz Welser-Möst
Arthaus Musik

RALPH VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
The Choir of Clare College Cambridge
The Dmitri Ensemble
David Willcocks
Albion Records


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