PINTSCHER Bereshit. Uriel. Songs from Solomon's Garden
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Matthias Pintscher
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Alpha
Magazine Review Date: 02/2017
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 73
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: ALPHA218
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Bereshit |
Matthias Pintscher, Composer
Ensemble InterContemporain, Paris Matthias Pintscher, Composer |
Uriel |
Matthias Pintscher, Composer
Dimitri Vassilakis, Piano Erica-Maria Couturier, Cello Matthias Pintscher, Composer |
Songs from Solomon's Garden |
Matthias Pintscher, Composer
Ensemble InterContemporain, Paris Evan Hughes, Baritone Matthias Pintscher, Composer |
Author: Philip Clark
The subject matter helps. Concerned with the very act of Creation, this music wisely avoids figurative sound-painting. Pintscher’s representation of chaos is instead mirrored inside the piecemeal unfolding of a structure that we hear painfully assembling itself, sometimes with thrilling undertones of a composer confessing ‘I don’t know where this might be headed either’. Bereshit is a Hebrew word implying different meanings of ‘beginning’: first breaths taken, the big-bang of Creation, raw expression swilling around the ether before any language existed to articulate it. But composerly uncertainty and painful assemblages are, it turns out, an illusion embedded into a score that is motivated by wanting to reveal process over defining any finished product.
Sounds crack, splutter, fade. The piece begins before the music, with a gong sustaining a hardly present tremble of energy as super-high string harmonics (on double bass?) reach towards a fragile ozone layer. Deep-toned contrabass clarinet sorties start to plunder the bowels of the orchestra, searching for a core that has yet to exist. Instruments gesticulate without necessarily forming notes; then Pintscher gradually, imperceptibly even, draws together prominent pitches until a functioning harmony begins to operate. And you know it is operational because a swarm of interrupting woodblocks – in a gesture perhaps referencing Morton Feldman’s Violin and Orchestra – registers as a rude, jolting structural shock.
The gestural language of Songs from Solomon’s Garden (2009) and Uriel for cello and piano (2011 12), immaculately performed as they are, can’t quite match the unknowable mysteries of Bereshit – a smartly imagined and beautifully choreographed glimpse into a world beyond our own.
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