Yolanda
Kondonassis, harp, and various other artists. Oberlin Music OC 13004.
The idea for Ravel:
Intimate Masterpieces was the brainchild of harpist Yolanda Kondonassis,
who is not only a best-selling performer and author but heads the harp
department at the Oberlin Conservatory and the Cleveland Institute of Music.
Her concept for the album was to record several very personal Ravel chamber
works performed by several very personal friends of the Oberlin Conservatory:
faculty members, alumni, and resident artists. OK, the thematic relationships
here may be tenuous, but the results are solid.
For those of you who may be unfamiliar with the Oberlin
Conservatory, it’s situated amidst Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio. Founded in
1865, it is the oldest continuously operating music conservatory in the United
States, and in 2009 the government awarded it the National Medal of Arts, the
highest honor given to artists and arts patrons. The Conservatory is releasing
the present album on their own label, Oberlin Music, which they founded in
2007. So, yeah, Ms. Kondonassis and her friends know what they’re doing and do
it well.
The first of four selections on the program is the Introduction et Allegro (1905) by French
composer Maurice Ravel (1875-1937). The performers involved are Ms.
Kondonassis, harp; Alexa Still, flute; Richard Hawkins, clarinet; and the
Jupiter String Quartet (Nelson Lee, Meg Freivogel, Liz Freivogel, and Daniel
McDonough). In the Introduction et
Allegro we get some idea of how precarious Ravel’s position was in the
musical world of the early twentieth century. Romanticism was on its way out;
modernism, with all the experimentation that implies, was the coming rage.
Ravel sort of straddled the line in 1905, producing a lushly Romantic, harmonic
piece that clearly reflected more of the Debussy imagery of the previous
century than the coming rhythms of the Stravinsky age.
Anyway, the Introduction
et Allegro is lovely in every regard, the players ensuring that it floats
and glides effortlessly. Needless to say, Ms. Kondonassis's harp is the star of
the show, and she demonstrates with her subtly ethereal finger work why she is
one of the world's leading harpists.
Next up is the String
Quartet in F major, a four-movement affair that Ravel wrote in 1903,
performed by the Jupiter String Quartet. The composer introduces his two
primary melodies in the first movement and develops them further throughout the
work. The music is very sensual in the manner and style of Debussy, with the
Jupiter players giving it a heartfelt yet never overly emotional
interpretation. It has a light, airy feeling to it, alway precisely
articulated, with no one player dominating. The pizzicato strings of the second
movement seem quite playful before falling into line with the work's more
serious moods. The Jupiters display an energy and vitality in the final
movement that brings the piece to a thrilling, agitated, and eventually
jubilant close.
After that we find Chansons
madecasses, a set of three songs Ravel wrote in 1925-26, becoming among his
more controversial works for their apparent disparagement of his country's push
for nationalism and ethnic solidarity. Performing the songs are Ellie Dehn,
soprano; Alexa Still, flute and piccolo; Daniel McDonough, cello; and Spencer
Myer, piano. Together, they produce nuanced interpretations, Ms. Dehn's voice
delicate and expressive, the accompaniment beguiling.
The program wraps up with Ravel's Cinq melodies populaires grecques, performed by Ms. Dehns and Ms.
Kondonassis. These five songs helped to solidify the composer's reputation for
"aloofness," of being distant and, especially, apart from his
countrymen and fellow musicians. Nevertheless, the apparent
"inexpressivity" that many critics found in the music doesn't
interfere with Dehns and Kondonassis providing exquisitely beautiful
realizations of the folklike tunes. They conclude the album on a most positive
and endearing note.
Recorded, mixed, and mastered by audio engineer Paul
Eachus, he and producer David H. Stull made the album at Clonick Hall, Oberlin
Conservatory of Music, Oberlin, Ohio in January 2013. It's distanced just
enough not to be right in one’s face yet close enough to provide a good deal of
inner detail. Each instrument sounds clearly defined and well separated from
the others, while combining realistically. There's a warm ambient glow around
the notes that makes the whole affair sound quite comfortable and, well,
intimate.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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