Reviews for
GMCD 7241 The Sunpainter's Delight
Tages Anzeiger Thursday June 19 2003
Stille Sonnen
HEIMSPIEL
Eine
stilistische Reise ist auf dieser CD zu erleben. Man könnte natürlich auch «Entwicklung»
nennen, was sich in der Klaviermusik des Zürcher Komponisten Walter Baer
zwischen den 6oer- und den späten 90er-Jahren vollzog. Doch damit würden die
früheren Stücke in einen Anfängerstatus gedrängt, den sie nicht verdienten.
Zumal Walter Baer in Werken wie «Sequenzen» oder «Zwei Klavierstücke», beide
1968 entstanden offensichtlich den avantgardistischen Zeitgeist jener
Tage aufnahm.
An der musikalischen Front so zu- sagen beginnt
also die Reise, und sie mündet in die geheimnisvollen
Pedalklänge der im Jahr 2000 entstandenen
«Erscheinungen». Der englische Pianist Andrew Zolinsky horcht ihnen ebenso
subtil nach wie den von diversen Stilanleihen geprägten «Passagen» 1 bis 111, in
denen nicht nur Komponisten wie Ravel oder Debussy anklingen, sondern andere
auch explizit zitiert werden Webern wird ein «Epitaph» gewidmet und das BACH-
Motiv wird in impressionistischem Umfeld in ein «Prelude» eingeflochten. '
Doch ob auch auf Fugen oder die «Sonnenbilder»
P. K Hoenichs zurückgegriffen wird- Wesentlicher Gesamteindruck dieser Musik
bleibt eine still blühende, schöne und ernsthafte Nachdenklichkeit. (mez)
Walter Baer. «The Sunpainter's Delight»;
Andrew Zolinsky, Klavier (Guild Musie 724i).
NEUE
ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG
- Thursday March 06 2003 – Issue No. 54
Walter Baer:
The Sunpainter’s delight, Piano Works – Andrew Zolinsky (Piano) Guild GMCD 7241
Kontemplative Kläng
Klaviermusik von Walter Baer
Der Zürcher Komponist Walter Baer, Jahrgang 1928, hat, obwohl von Haus aus
Pianist, erstaunlich wenig Werke für Klavier solo komponiert. In den Jahren 1996
bis 1998 jedoch schrieb er mit den „Passagen“ I bis III gleich neun kleinere
Stücke für sein Instrument. Zusammen mit drei Kompositionen aus den sechziger
Jahren sind sie krzlich beim Label Guild auf CD erschienen. Der englische
Pianist Andrew Zolinsky, vertraut im Umgang mit zeitgenössischer Musik, ist
Baers Klaviermusik ein beredter Anwalt,. Und dies paradoxerweise, indem er ihr
leisen Töne und ihre verborgenen Werte in rechte Licht rückt.
Faszinierend etwa, wie er in „Erscheinungen“ durch eine spezielle Pedaltecknik
aus raschen Figuren unerwartet Klänge wie aus dem Nichts erstehen lasst. Baer
ließ sich hier wie auch in zwei weiteren Stücken von Bildern des Sonnenmalers
P.K. Hoenich inspirieren. In „Sonnenbild“ aus den „Passagen I“ setzte er seine
Eindrücke mit quirligeh Arpeggien in der rechten Hand und einer eingängigen
schreitenden Melodie in der linken Hand um, woraus in der Interpretation des
Pianisten ein kontinuierliches Fließen entstehet. Ein weiteres Charakteristikum
der „Passagen“ ist der spielerische Umgang mit historischem Material. Da gibt es
eine Fuge in „Widmung“, iein Zitat aus der Gregorianischen Totenmesse in
„Epitaph für Anton Webern“ oder die Kombination von B-A-C-H Motiv und
impressionistischem Stil in „Prèlude bien tempérè“
Die drei Klavierwerke aus dem Jahr 1968 – sie stammen aus der Anfangszeit von
Baers kompositorischem Schaffen – lehnen sich an die damaligen
avantgardistischen Strömungen an, verbinden aber den Gestus der Aufbruchs mit
Baers Neigung zum Kontemplativen und Abgerundeten „Sequenzen für Klavier“
beispielsweise beginnt, wie ein Stück von Ligeti, mit einer clusterartigen
Klangauffächerung und ist in einer grafischen Notation aufgezeichnet, die dem
Pianisten etliche Freiheiten einräumt. Die wirbeligen, dissonanten Teile müden
dabei stets in langsames, besinnliches ja klangschönes Spiel.
Thomas
Schacher
Musicweb January 29 03
The
Sunpainter's Delight
Walter BAER (b.1928)
Passagen I (1996)
Passagen II (1997)
Passagen III (1998)
Erscheinungen (2000)
Sequenzen für Klavier (1968)
Zwei Klavierstücke (1968)
Andrew
Zolinsky, piano
Recorded at Potton Hall, Suffolk, December 2001.
GUILD
GMCD 7241 [71:13]
The title of this disc
of piano music by Swiss composer Baer and several of the pieces on it were
inspired by the work of the "sunpainter" P.K. Hoenich. They are among the most
impressionistic pieces on a selection which runs, in terms of influence, from
Debussy and Ravel through Messiaen to the Second Viennese School and back. It is
something of a stylistic melange and means that the individual pieces within
supposedly related groups often seem anything but; however, the music is
generally very listenable but, unfortunately, much less memorable. The earliest
pieces, dating from the ’sixties, are the most "avant-garde" but hardly
difficult to listen to, if requiring slightly more concentration.
The meat of the disc is,
I suppose, the three sets of Passagen, each group of three pieces dating
from the 1990s, although they are not represented in either forward or reverse
chronological order. Interspersed with these works are the previously mentioned
1960s efforts and the most recent work, 2000s Erscheinungen (Visions),
the longest single track on the CD which reminds me in places of a more
energised but less disciplined Mompou; whatever, at fourteen minutes plus it
comes across as a more substantial piece than most of the works here.
The composer's own notes
are informative, in terms of the generation of each piece, but there is a slight
hint of name dropping - admittedly, one piece is actually called Epitaph for
Anton Webern (why not Le Tombeau de?) but Bach and Wagner are also
name-checked, as well as the aforementioned Hoenich and Swiss religious hero
Zwingli. Taken in isolation, there is no single piece here that I minded
hearing. However, comparing for example with two artist programmes of mixed
repertoire (Thomas Adès on EMI and Elena Riu on Linn), I found the latter just
as stylistically consistent as this single composer disc, i.e. to these ears, as
intimated above, I could have been listening to Webern one minute, Debussy the
next. As with Adès I was juxtaposing Grieg and Nancarrow, and with Riu, Pärt and
Sculthorpe. My favourite sequence here was, by far, the Passagen II,
where despite the relative disparity of styles, the music appears far more
urgent and communicative than elsewhere. I have been listening to a lot of piano
music recently (Rzewski, Nielsen, Casella etc.) and, although I have enjoyed
listening to this disc more than once, Baer can hardly be described as being
among the front rank in this idiom.
Neil Horner
International Record Review 12.02
W. Baer The
Sunpainter's Delight
Erscheinungen.
Passagen I, II and III. Sequenzen für Klavier. Zwei Klavierstücke.
Andrew
Zolinsky
(piano).
Guild GMCD7241
(full price, 1 hour 11 minutes). Website www.guildmusic.com. Notes in
English/French/ German included. Producer/Engineer Michael Ponder.
Date December 8th, 2001. Location Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk.
There seem to
be certain qualities common to the music of many composers who work in relative
isolation. That's not necessarily meant in the geographical sense, of course,
otherwise we'd be knee-deep in theses that strove to relate the work of Sir
Peter Maxwell Davies to that of Conlon Nancarrow. Rather, it's the elements of
self-determination that make the resulting music notable and frequently
noteworthy, and there's no shortage of diversity within these parameters. Walter
Baer's isolation is simply that of thousands of composers the world over who
produce worthwhile music which rarely if ever seems to travel very far.
Typically of this contingent, the Swiss-born Baer has held a variety of academic
positions both at home and abroad, while also garnering a few composition prizes
(in this case from the Lucerne Festival and the European Choral Society). And
now, here's a CD of some of his piano music, bravely launched onto the
unpredictable tides of the international market. How might it fare?
Well, as it
happens, listeners worldwide whose knowledge of Swiss music is perhaps confined
to Heinz Holliger and Klaus Huber may well care to acquire this disc. Piano
music has convenient economics when it comes to releases of this kind and Baer's
compositions are in no sense demanding, but the pieces have a certain
unpretentious charm. These works span a long period (1968-2000) and Baer is
something of a stylistic magpie (possibly a luxury which his particular form of
isolation allows him), deploying everything from lush, Debussian textures to
Cage-like rapping (in the percussive rather than the vocal sense!) on the
instrument's casework. This music abhors the absolute and is frequently inspired
by visual and typographical ideas, an approach that can easily backfire and lead
to charges of superficiality. In all honesty, despite Baer's senior status in
overall career terms, these do not feel like 'mature' works in the usual sense
but they are diverting enough, and Andrew Zolinsky interprets them meticulously.
The recorded sound has a slightly front-roomy feel which in fact suits the music
rather well.
Roger Thomas
MUSICWEB 17 September 02
Walter BAER (born 1928)
The Sunpainter's Delight
Passagen I (1996)
Passagen II (1997)
Passagen III (1998)
Erscheinungen (2000)
Sequenzen für Klavier (1968)
Zwei Klavierstücke (1968)
Andrew
Zolinsky (piano)
Recorded: Potton Hall, Suffolk, December 2001
GUILD
GMCD 7241 [71:13]
The earliest works
here, both dating from 1968, obviously belong to Baer’s modern or experimental
period, and are stylistically redolent of Boulez or Stockhausen. Angular
phrases, complex rhythms and sharp contrasts characterise both Sequenzen
and Zwei Klavierstücke, though the latter already points towards a
freer expression, particularly so in the first piece Threnos.
All the other pieces
are fairly recent and clearly reflect Baer’s stylistic journey towards a more
colourful and more expressive palette. The music of Passagen,
composed between 1996 and 1998, is more overtly impressionistic. This is quite
evident in Passagen III, and still more so in its third movement
Souvenir. "It is up to the listener to draw his own reminiscences from
the character of the piece" (pace the composer). This seems to me a
homage to Debussy. (It may also be useful to know that the titles of the three
movements are in French and that the second movement is inspired by a walk in a
park in Paris known as La promenade plantée.) Other movements in
Passagen also betray their inspirational origin in painting, e.g.
Sonnenbild (in Passagen I) or The Painter’s Delight (in
Passagen II), both inspired by paintings by Hoenich. Instrumental
colour is paramount in these works and it is sometimes achieved by some
extra-musical devices, such as in the third piece Epitaph for Anton Webern
(in Passagen I) in which the outer, chorale-like sections have an
eerie tint obtained by laying a stick over the strings. This is actually the
only "gimmick" used by the composer, and quite discretely so.
The most recent work,
Erscheinungen from 2000, is a substantial piece of music, and
incidentally the longest single item. Its title (i.e. Visions) has no
religious or mystical overtones, but rather refers to the mysterious chorales
emerging on several occasions in the course of the piece between the other,
livelier and more animated sections. Again, the listener’s fancy may imagine
his/her own visions; but the inspiration for the music draws again on Hoenich’s
paintings.
Walter Baer’s name and
music were, I confess, completely new to me. Eminently idiomatic, though often
rather taxing piano writing that calls for much colour, imagination and tonal
variety on the performer’s part. Andrew Zolinsky obviously possesses all the
qualities required to get the best of these fine and attractive pieces that
generously repay repeated hearings. Now, I really look forward to hearing more
of Walter Baer’s music.
Hubert Culot
But Gary Higginson
asks
Question. What kind of music would a man born in Zurich in 1928 compose? Time
up. I shall reveal the answer in due course.
Stockhausen was born then, Henze in 1926, Berio in 1925. It’s useful to think of
Baer, who is a well known figure in German musical life in this context because
his music is mostly not at all what you might expect. The biographical notes in
the booklet comment "The various compositional techniques and systems only make
sense to me if they convey a message the listener can participate in". He ends
up being one of the most eclectic composers I have ever encountered. I’ll talk
you through a few pieces to give you an idea.
‘Passagen’, probably best translated not as passages, which conveys
little, but as possibly, pathways, and like all paths they lead to
somewhere else. Each path though is enjoyable in itself, but there is no attempt
by the composer to connect them, at least not in a way that I could discover. So
‘Passagen I’ begins with ‘Widmung’ meaning ‘Dedication’, here to the musical
pedagogue Wolfgang Roscher whose name is spelt out in the music. The style or
soundworld of this piece reminds me of Bartók in places, and a brief fugue
develops based on these letters, perhaps another Bartókian idea. It winds
chromatically in a rather learned way in four parts. At its climax unison figure
announces the end of the fugue and the movement winds up quickly. The second
movement ‘Sunpainting’ is impressionistic; it is inspired by the work of the
painter P.K. Hoenich and obviously is partly responsible for giving the CD its
title. A wash of right hand semi-quavers and/or tremolandi accompany a left-hand
melody not unlike the chimes of Big Ben. Debussy might be brought to mind, but a
watered-down Debussy.
Movement 3 ‘Epitaph for Anton Webern’ starts off with a gamelan noise. Some of
the strings of the piano have been laid over with a stick, and both of these
things remind me more of John Cage. The stick is then removed and the
composition becomes pointillistic, not completely atonal, but more Webern. It is
the longest of the three in the set. The opening returns for the last minute or
so.
Other pieces on the disc include another impressionist interpretation of the
work of Hoenich, - movement 3 of ‘Passagen II’ entitled the ‘Sunpainter’s
Delight’; Movement 2 is an evocative re-enactment of the bells of the composer’s
hometown, Zurich, with its myriad bells ringing out.
Passagen III opens with a wash of French type sound, which is in fact in homage
to J.S. Bach with the B.A.C.H motif used throughout. For me though, Ravel was
brought to mind.
I hope that I have conveyed some impression of the music and its background. I’m
sorry to say that for me it lacks structural integrity and a real character of
its own. Although the music is rarely unattractive it can often be dull and
repetitive.
The booklet notes written by the composer are too succinct to be really useful.
The playing of Andrew Zolinsky is exemplary and he seems really to believe in
the music and is, anyway, a regular performer of contemporary music. The
recording is perfectly good and only enhances the music. But there is little
here I feel to retain much interest.
Gary Higginson
Page revised 26.06.03
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