Having demonstrated their musical excellence with three well-received
recordings on PENTATONE of orchestral works of Antonin Dvořák, Houston
Symphony and Andrés Orozco-Estrada now present an album that comes
closer to their cultural roots than ever before. Dance rhythms, jazzy
harmonies, bright colours, city sounds; everything one associates with
The Americas can be heard on this recording. With George Gershwin’s 1928
piece An American in Paris, Silvestre Revueltas’s Sensemayá (1938),
Leonard Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from West Side Story (1961) and
Ástor Piazzolla’s Tangazo (1970), it brings together composers from
across the twentieth century, all connected by their belonging to the
Americas. Moreover, all of these composers reconfigured the barriers
between classical and popular music, combining them to produce a sound
that illustrates their home region. In choosing these particular works,
Houston Symphony and Andrés Orozco-Estrada have aimed not to cover the
entire continent but rather to provide ‘impressions’ of America and to
‘illuminate’ as many colours in the music as possible.
Sensemayá showcases the highly original combination of native elements
from the pre-colonial indigenous past with avant-garde techniques that
characterizes the music of Mexican composer Revueltas. Leonard
Bernstein’s West Side Story, from which a suite of Symphonic Dances is
featured on this album, belongs to the most popular and famous American
music ever. Bernstein illuminates the story of two rival gangs in New
York by juxtaposing a jazz-blues ‘American’ idiom with a more ‘Latin
American’ Puerto Rican sound, in which the Cuban mambo and cha-cha, and
the Mexican huapango are also integrated. Ástor Piazzolla’s Tangazo
(grand tango) incorporates neo-classical elements such as a fugue into
the national Argentinian dance music par excellence, realizing a
reconciliation between native influences and trends in contemporary
classical music. In Gershwin’s jazzy symphonic poem An American in
Paris, city sounds temporarily give way to a sorrowful, homesickness
blues, but the piece ends in regained excitement. (PENTATONE)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario