Song of Songs. Berio: Naturale. Lang: Just (after Song of Songs). Olivero: En la mar hai una torre
Knox takes on three works inspired by a variety of cultures
November 3, 2015
Musicians
Garth Knox (viola) Agnès Vesterman (cello) Cliona Doris (harp) Sylvain Lemêtre (percussion and tape) Mediaeval Trio/Andrew Synnott
Composer
Berio, Lang, Olivero
Catalogue number
LOUTH CONTEMPORARY MUSIC LCMS 1502
Berio’s Naturale (1985), for solo viola, percussion and pre-recorded tape, is a reconfiguring of his earlier Voci: the same pool of viola material but with the instrumental accompaniment of the earlier score now usurped by the husky splendour of a Sicilian folk singer whom Berio taped for posterity in Palermo. Taking his cue from Berio’s title and the implication of a natural state of being, Garth Knox savours twisting his viola away from plain concert-hall equal temperament towards the ecstatic, elastic tuning of the (unnamed) singer. The piece is subtitled ‘action for dance’, as though viola player and percussionist are engaged in a courtly mating ritual. And this performance crackles with chemistry as Knox develops and actively paraphrases the folk singer’s material – a duologue of melodic inference underpinned by the harmonic latticework of Sylvain Lemêtre’s marimba.
Betty Olivero’s En la mar hai una torre draws on sources from Muslim and Jewish cultures – laudable politics but undistilled compositionally – while David Lang’s strikingly wistful Just dwells on erotic yearning and desire through the simple strategy of allying a text adapted from the biblical Song of Songs with a recurring chord sequence, as Garth Knox’s viola accompanies with lines that are heartbreakingly affecting in a Ray Davies kind of way. These are live recordings, which have been lucidly transferred to disc.
PHILIP CLARK
http://www.thestrad.com/cpt-reviews/song-of-songs-berio-naturale-lang-just-after-song-of-songs-olivero-en-la-mar-hai-una-torre/