Wednesday, November 04, 2020

Concurrences - music of Iceland refreshingly diverse

This release features all world premiere recordings by Icelandic composers. If there's a common thread that gives this music an "Icelandic" quality, I didn't hear it. What I did hear were four talented composers expressing themselves in four very different ways. 

The Iceland Symphony Orchestra directed by Daniel Bjarnason delivers exciting performances of some very difficult music. And the ensemble exceptionally well-recorded, too. The fine details revealed in the recording are essential to the success of some of these works. 

Anna Thorvaldsdottir's "Metacosmos" starts the program. It's a tightly-knit web of motifs. They interact, change, yet always retain their identities.

The Piano Concerto No. 2 of Thomasson is quite different. The work builds slowly in a minimalist fashion. Rhythmic patterns play against each other, increasing in tension as the work progresses. The shifting relationships between the patterns and those between the piano and orchestra seem to reinvent the concept of the concerto. 

"Oceans" by Sogfimsttir reminded me slightly of Kaija Saariaho. But only slightly. Sgfimstter uses long, sustained chords that change very slowly over time. But her sound clouds have a thicker texture than Sarriahos. This is a work of contemplative beauty. 

Palsson's work "Quake" also reminded me of another work -- the "Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima" by Penderecki. While similar, the emotional center of the work is quite different. Quake communicates mystery and foreboding rather than sorrow. Saeunn Thorsteindóttir, cello;
 
This is actually the second volume in this series. I'm very sorry I missed the first.

Concurrence 
Music by Anna Torvaldsdóttir, Hauker Tómasson, Maria Huld Markan Sifgusdóttir, Páll Ragnar Palsson 
Iceland Symphony Orchestra; Daniel Bjarnason, conductor 
Sono Luminus DSL-92237 
World Premier Recordings 

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