To reduce a group of works from a variety of different scorings to fit just three specific
instrumentalists is a
most unusual process: especially in contemporary music, where
normally the composer’s original scoring is assumed to be sacrosanct. In these
cases,
however, the composers have all acquiesced in their treatment, and no wonder! The
resulting music reveals the form and richness of each
composer’s imagination in a way
that is both
startling and joyful. It is like comparing a winter woodland to its appearance
six months earlier. Gone is the profusion of colour and sensuous abundance, but instead
underlying shapes emerge that were concealed before, and a more muted range of
colours displays itself, each
one intimately compelling in its singularity. Eventually a new
sense
of richness is created as the mind and the eye – and the ear – adjust themselves to
the world about them. What seems at first glance to be only grey and brown begins to
show elements of red, and yellow, and blue, and even green.
What further distinguishes this recording is the fact that the performers have had a hand
in creating the music, as well as re-creating it. This aspect of music-making plays all too
little role in contemporary ‘art’ music, apart from those
instances where musicians are
asked to improvise – and thus to use
a skill that may virtually have atrophied from want
of exercise. But improvisation is only one aspect of creative
performance, and Alpha’s close encounter with the musical essences of these
works seems to have given the trio
a precious sense
of ownership of the music, even while the works mysteriously and
naturally retain their identity with
the composers who made them. This idea of music as
something ‘open’ – in this case, specific notes and yet open to different instrumentation
and therefore different modes of articulation (which
in turn open up a cornucopia of
possibilities) – is something rare and valuable.
And finally the music: it doesn’t sound to me like new music with
that slightly forbidding aura of something that may be good for you, but doesn’t frankly quite grab your
attention as you secretly want it to. This music
does
grab and hold onto you. One must
therefore give honour where it’s due: to the composers of course. But I think it also has
something to do with
the way the performers too have re-imagined it, and in the process
invented a new level of meaning for the verb ‘perform’. (Paul Hillier)
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