Quasi Morendo is Reto Bieri’s third appearance on ECM New Series and follows the 2011 solo clarinet album Contrechant
(with music of Berio, Carter, Holliger, Eötvös, Sciarrino and Vajda)
and a powerful performance of Galina Ustvolskaya’s Trio for Clarinet,
Violin and Piano with Patricia Kopatchinskaja and Markus Hinterhäuser,
issued in 2014.
Contrechant was widely praised for both the Swiss
clarinettist’s beauty of tone and his uncommon expressiveness with
extended instrumental techniques. Quasi Morendo begins with a new exploration of one of the pieces featured on that first album, Salvatore Sciarrino’s Let Me Die Before I Wake (1982), reentering its “whisper-quiet sound world of harmonics, multiphonics and tremolandos” (as The Guardian
described it) and making new discoveries. “How the sounds come about is
a mystery even to me,” Bieri tells liner writer Roman Brotbeck. “With
special grips, even slight changes in the approach to the sound, it is
possible to create particular multiphonics; through breathing and
blowing (a big difference!) I can influence these sounds in the finest
degree.”
Reto Bieri is then joined by the Finnish string quartet Meta4 for a
profound interpretation of Johannes Brahms’s Quintet op 115 (1891).
Written late in his life, it was inspired by friendship with
clarinettist Richard Mühlfeld. Brahms had planned to retire in 1890, but
after hearing Mühlfeld play music of Weber, Mozart and Ludwig Spohrl,
he rededicated himself to composing to create works that count amongst
the finest of his long career. From the liner notes: “The Clarinet
Quintet is a swan song, a finale; gestures of closure dominate. Even the
beginning has the effect of a coda. The strings intone a sinking
elegiac melody over four bars, preparing the entrance on the clarinet.”
The quintet often sounds freer, and more idyllic, than Brahms’s earlier
chamber music, yet is one of his most meticulously constructed works.
The album closes with French composer Gérard Pesson’s Nebenstück (1998), a ghostly re-arrangement of Brahms’s Ballade, Op. 10 No. 4.
Though elogiously are the comment on this record, I cannot agree with them, specially on Brahms Clarinet Quintet. This is the supreme kind of masterwork that demands an equal supreme performers, or nothing at all. And if its true some very fines sounds of Reto Bieri's clarinet sound, he is far away of what this work demands. If it sound impressive on Sciarrino's work is because nobody else has played his music, and I seriously doubt that it would be a musical benchmark for anyone, as many modern music is in fact. Concerning with Brahms masterpiece, both Meta4 and Bieri are not the best performers for this piece of art. It is so obvious that they are not familiarized with Brahms music, and that they played very superficially, without any deeper reading and comprehension on all the subtles on this masteríece. Its ver sad to listen a group of performers that only read on the surface and not go into the real depths of such a masterpiece, but this usually happen with so many releases on classical music on ECM. This is a very poor rendition of this masterpiece, as any other you can listen to into your local hall at your city.
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