Turnage Songs
Finley magnificent in the Turnage anti-war settings that crown a fine disc
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Mark-Anthony Turnage
Genre:
Chamber
Label: LPO
Magazine Review Date: 4/2008
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 66
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: LPO0031
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Twice Through the Heart |
Mark-Anthony Turnage, Composer
London Philharmonic Orchestra Marin Alsop, Conductor Mark-Anthony Turnage, Composer Sarah Connolly, Mezzo soprano |
Hidden Love Song |
Mark-Anthony Turnage, Composer
London Philharmonic Orchestra Marin Alsop, Conductor Mark-Anthony Turnage, Composer Martin Robertson, Saxophone |
(The) Torn Field |
Mark-Anthony Turnage, Composer
Gerald Finley, Baritone London Philharmonic Orchestra Marin Alsop, Conductor Mark-Anthony Turnage, Composer |
Author: David Gutman
Hidden Love Song, featuring saxophonist Martin Robertson, derives from a live concert with applause retained. This first new composition associated with Turnage’s LPO tenure is a wordless offering built from musical ciphers associated with the composer’s partner. The characteristic attempts to disrupt the lyrical line are thus carefully rationed and there’s no mistaking the professional gleam and twinkle of the results.
Confirming a certain softening of idiom, The Torn Fields is equally accessible though weightier thematically. Here Turnage eschews Jackie Kay’s down-to-earth phraseology in Twice Through the Heart, preferring the sort of poetry that attracted composers of a previous anti-war generation. The music still draws on vernacular bluesy elements but they lie within a smoother, more melodic, high-culture mix. Bryn Terfel was at one time scheduled to perform the sequence but it’s difficult to imagine a more ardent exponent than Gerald Finley. While the orchestral writing is spare, Finley’s diction is second to none, allied to exceptional beauty of tone. Particularly haunting is the Wilfred Owen setting (tr 14), the narrative of a soldier who, like the protagonist of The Silver Tassie, survives severely maimed only to experience physical and emotional rejection. The gentle treatment of the familiar final poem by Siegfried Sassoon (tr 17) provides a glimpse of the transcendent. Excellent contextual notes plus full texts (including passages not set by the composer). No nonsense here about having to go online!
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