
Hermann Conen in the CD booklet: "Sofia Gubaidulina has accepted the
challenge of attempting to capture the great mystery in sound. Although
the seven movements are, at least initially, clearly separated by string
passages, there is no parallelism of word and sound in the traditional
sense. It is more a matter of the instruments 'uttering' what cannot be
sung or said; they 'speak' with 'instrumental, metaphorical gestures'
(Gubaidulina).The cross symbolism palpable throughout the 'Seven Words'
begins on the instrumental level: the cello, coming from the art music
of 'high culture', stands for what is 'lofty'; the bayan, a button
accordion from the sphere of Russian folk music. Although the sound
production is totally different (bowed strings, metal reeds vibrated by
air), the two instruments reveal astonishingly similar sonorities,
sometimes to the point of indistinguishability...The music of the string
orchestra is devised as a contrast to the harsh chromaticism of the
cello/bayan and remains clearly separated during the first two
movements. The presto and pianissimo string passages soaring from a note
played in unison open up a tonal sphere that rises and falls like the
sweep of wings ... From the very first sound a ritualised musical
meditation begins, its individual core elements unfolding almost
imperceptibly at first and then growing inexorably towards one another."
Elsbeth Moser, who plays the bayan on this recording, is one of
Gubaidulina's closest musical associates and dedicatee of several works
(including the landmark "Silenzio") and understands the composer's
intentions. Her performance of "De Profundis" (composed 1978) is
astonishing. Writing of a recent concert, critic Richard Whitehouse
noted that the bayan, "in the hands of Elsbeth Moser on the solo 'De
Profundis', effortlessly combined the provocation of a new sound
resource with the timelessness of a traditional instrument."
The "Ten Preludes" (1974, revised 1999) for cello began life as a set
of teaching pieces, with each of the Preludes addressing a different
technical consideration, but there is space in these fascinating pieces
also for the interpreter to make his own mark. Gubaidulina:
"Particularly the last prelude in the cycle gives performers an
opportunity to make the work their own . There, improvisatory passages,
which every player can interpret in a different way, are interposed in
the composed score. I planned this deliberately, to illustrate how an
instrumentalist's creative imagination alters musical content."
Boris Pergamenshikov gives his creative imagination free rein here.
The Leningrad born cellist has been an important contributor to
international concert activity since emigrating to the West in 1977. His
varied soloist or chamber music experience has included work with
Claudio Abbado, the Amadeus and Alban Berg Quartets, Gidon Kremer,
Witold Lutoslawski, Yehudi Menuhin, Krzysztof Penderecki, Mstislav
Rostropovich, Andras Schiff, and Sándor Végh.
Pergamenshikov first recorded for ECM in 1985, appearing on a
recording from the Lockenhaus Festival where he played music of
Shostakovich with Gidon Kremer, Thomas Zehetmair, and Nobuko Imai.
It's nice to hear the bayan, but the whole picture is way too much gubaidulinian... or at least more than untrained ears like mine can endure.
ResponderEliminarDear Music-is-the-Key, is it possible to re-up this Gubaidulina release? I would be very happy...
ResponderEliminar