Elegia
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Kevin J Cope, Ernesto Cavallini, John Cage, Henri Rabaud, Giuseppe Verdi, Aurélio Magnani, Camille Saint-Saëns
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Navona
Magazine Review Date: 01/2018
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 0
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: NV6120
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Sonata for Clarinet |
John Cage, Composer
Christopher Nichols, Clarinet John Cage, Composer Julie Nishimura, Piano |
Elegia |
Aurélio Magnani, Composer
Aurélio Magnani, Composer Christopher Nichols, Clarinet Julie Nishimura, Piano |
Sonata for Clarinet and Piano |
Camille Saint-Saëns, Composer
Camille Saint-Saëns, Composer Christopher Nichols, Clarinet Julie Nishimura, Piano |
Solo de Concours |
Henri Rabaud, Composer
Christopher Nichols, Clarinet Henri Rabaud, Composer Julie Nishimura, Piano |
Sirocco for Clarinet |
Kevin J Cope, Composer
Christopher Nichols, Clarinet Julie Nishimura, Piano Kevin J Cope, Composer |
(La) forza del destino, '(The) force of destiny', Movement: Andante |
Giuseppe Verdi, Composer
Christopher Nichols, Clarinet Giuseppe Verdi, Composer Julie Nishimura, Piano |
Adagio and Tarantella |
Ernesto Cavallini, Composer
Christopher Nichols, Clarinet Ernesto Cavallini, Composer Julie Nishimura, Piano |
Author: Guy Rickards
The Frenchman’s sonata is a beautifully crafted, late-autumnal work as one might expect from a composer in his mid-eighties. Nichols gives a very fluent account, relishing the many different textures the master orchestrator deployed, and Nishimura’s accompaniment is sensitive and never overshadows her partner. This applies, too, for Rabaud’s challenging, expressive Solo de concours (1901) and the wistful Andante from Verdi’s La forza del destino, often used as an audition test piece. (It is not clear which version has been used: not Richard Stoltzman’s, I think; perhaps Ben Armato’s.) I was less taken with Cavallini’s mundane Adagio and Tarantella and Aurelio Magnani’s Elegia. Magnani, like Armato, was a performer and teacher; Elegia is fluently written, beautifully played but rather dull and misplaced as title-track.
There is nothing dull about Cage’s four-minute, fairly tame Sonata (astonishing to think some players refused to perform it!), or Kevin J Cope’s Sirocco (2012) for the instrument in A, a clever little tone poem juxtaposing then blending elements of European and African (well, African American!) musics to depict the hot wind that blows from the one continent to the other. Good, natural sound.
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