For the past four decades and more, Itzhak Perlman has
been among the world’s premiere violinists; for many fans, the world’s greatest
violinist. Not only has he recorded practically every violin concerto ever
written, he has teamed up over the years with other prominent artists in
recordings with Placido Domingo, Luciano Pavarotti, Vladimir Ashkenazy, and
Andre Previn, to name a few. This time, he shares the spotlight with Yitzchak
Meir Helfgot, Chief Cantor of Manhattan’s Park East Synagogue, and two small,
supporting ensembles in an album of Jewish liturgical music that, as with
everything he’s done before, makes for glorious listening.
So, what is an album of Jewish liturgical music all about?
Let me quote from the album’s coproducer and music supervisor, Hankus Netsky:
“It’s part concert music, part improvisation--very ethnic and the culmination
of thousands of years of culture. It’s roots music--big-time roots music. It’s
Romanian, Ukrainian, Russian and gypsy-influenced folk music with a very strong
Jewish accent--as if it’s a Jewish prayer. At the same time, khazones (classic Jewish cantorial
music, the traditional music sung by the cantor in Jewish religious services)
can be considered Jewish classical music, not European concert classical music
by Jewish composers but an art form in the way of tradition that raga is an Indian music. They took their
religious liturgy and essentially made love songs to God.” The program insert
goes on to say, “Elements of Yiddish folk song and theater music, Hassidic song
and prayer, and klezmer music (traditional Jewish folk tunes and bands that
play them) all surface within the liturgical canon of Khazones--songs and dances for the soul.”
Both artists, Perlman and Helfgot, show their virtuosic
talents to good advantage. Perlman has lost none of the spark, spontaneity,
precision, and feeling he has always shown in his music making. And Cantor
Helfgot’s voice is simply amazing. It combines all the qualities of Perlman’s
violin with the addition of sheer power, rich inflection, remarkable
flexibility, and clean tone. The purity of both instruments--Perlman’s violin
and Helfgot’s voice--provides a uniquely triumphant duo and one of the most
pleasurable, listenable albums of the year.
Sony recorded Eternal
Voices at Avatar Studios, New York City, in 2011, and it comes with the
usual advantages and disadvantages of a typical studio recording. On the plus
side, the sound is beautifully clear, rendering the cantor’s voice extremely
lifelike and Perlman’s violin crisp and realistic. The engineers recorded both
them and the accompaniment rather closely, however, which is why we get such
startling clarity but also why the sound doesn’t capture much ambient
information. So, as clear as it is, the acoustic isn’t entirely natural, nor do
the orchestral ensembles appear too well integrated acoustically, the disc
making them seem a bit two-dimensional. In other words, the recording quality
is wonderfully lucid at the expense of producing more of a 2-D experience
rather than a multidimensional one.
Let me close with only two criticisms, quite minor. First,
at a little under an hour of playing time, the disc left me wanting to hear
much more. Second, the album cover looks unsightly to me: two faces against a
black background with a busy jumble of words across the top and bottom. But who
cares about such trivialities when the music is so splendid.
JJP
I wasn't quite sure -- too precious maybe -- but your usual fine review pushed me decidedly over the fence: can't wait to get it!
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