
New York-based composer Andrew Violette
has written some extremely unusual works, including a piano sonata that
clocks in at two and a half hours and is performed without a break. The
cello and clarinet sonatas heard here are quite a bit more conventional
(and shorter), but they still fall into an experimental and somewhat
mystical strain of music that appeared in different places and times in
the 20th century but still seems linked together. Although the two
pieces were both composed in 2011, the Sonata for cello and piano is
more novel. It is in eight movements, each of which exists
independently, yet which all develop a common idea: a melodic cello part
around which a piano weaves its own independent, dissonant world. The
effect is something like what you might imagine could have happened if Charles Ives had had Parisian training, or if he'd somehow continued composing after the 1920s and met up with Messiaen.
The structure of the eight movements has yet other dimensions,
including a set of funeral-march variations divided in two by the
longest movement, an evocation of "mournful bells."
The Sonata for clarinet and piano takes off more explicitly from French neo-classicism,
with a closer contrapuntal balance between the two parts and a more
conventional three-movement structure (but good luck reading the names
of the movements, obscured as much as possible by really ghastly graphic
design). This music seems at once individualistic and closely linked to
traditions of the past, and it makes you want to hear more from its
composer.
(James Manheim)
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