Lou Harrison A Portrait
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Lou Harrison
Label: Argo
Magazine Review Date: 8/1998
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 79
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 455 590-2ZH

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphony No. 4, "Last Symphony" |
Lou Harrison, Composer
Al Jarreau, Singer Barry Jekowsky, Conductor California Symphony Lou Harrison, Composer |
Solstice |
Lou Harrison, Composer
Barry Jekowsky, Conductor California Symphony Lou Harrison, Composer |
Concerto in slendro |
Lou Harrison, Composer
Barry Jekowsky, Conductor California Symphony Lou Harrison, Composer Maria Bachmann, Violin |
Elegy, to the Memory of Calvin Simmons |
Lou Harrison, Composer
Barry Jekowsky, Conductor California Symphony Lou Harrison, Composer |
Double Music |
Lou Harrison, Composer
Barry Jekowsky, Conductor California Symphony Lou Harrison, Composer |
Author: Andrew Achenbach
Following the success of those exemplary releases from MusicMasters devoted to Lou Harrison’s Second and Third Symphonies (5/93 and 5/95 respectively), Argo now offer us the Fourth (or Last Symphony, as the composer prefers to call it – though if he ever does complete a Fifth, he has already assured us that it will bear the title of “Very Last Symphony”!). Commissioned by the Brooklyn PO and Brooklyn Academy of Music, it was premiered in November 1990, since when Harrison has revised the work no less than four times; the (final) version recorded here dates from 1995.
Like its predecessors, the Last Symphony draws its curious compulsion from Harrison’s unique stylistic synthesis of Eastern and Western traditions spanning many centuries. The resulting timelessness lends his music a strongly communicative serenity (as exemplified by the Largo third movement), yet there’s also a trance-like concentration and fine craft which ensure that one’s attention rarely wavers. Of the symphony’s four movements, the last is the most immediately striking, featuring as it does a vocalist (here a characterful Al Jarreau) narrating three native-American (or Navajo, to be precise) “Coyote Stories” against a background of gamelan-like percussion sonorities. A similarly luminous, tintinnabulatory backcloth courses through the opening Largo, whereas the outer portions of the ensuing “Stampede” (one of the composer’s favourite terms, actually derived from the medieval dance known as the estampie) exhibit a pungent rhythmic ingenuity that can be traced back over 50 years to Harrison’s Double Music for percussion quartet (an exhilarating collaboration with John Cage dating from 1941, and the final item here).
Elsewhere, we are treated to six numbers from Solstice (one of a clutch of dance works Harrison completed whilst living in New York from 1943 to 1951), which imaginatively deploys an ensemble of flute, oboe, trumpet, two cellos, double-bass, tack-piano and celesta. The Concerto in slendro (1961) for violin, two tack-pianos, celesta and percussion was composed aboard a freighter bound for Tokyo (where Harrison attended the East-West Music Encounter Conference – his first trip to Asia, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation) and takes its name from a five-tone Indonesian mode. The collection kicks off with a touching Elegy written in just three days – August 22nd-24th, 1982 – inscribed to the memory of Calvin Simmons, the young conductor of the Oakland Symphony, and premiered a couple of days later at the Cabrillo Music Festival (a two-week event which also witnessed the first performance of Harrison’s Third Symphony).
I can report that performance- and production-values throughout are beyond reproach, and this uncommonly generous Argo anthology (which is also both expertly annotated and attractively presented) makes a worthy tribute to a likeable figure, who happily celebrated his 80th birthday in May of last year.'
Like its predecessors, the Last Symphony draws its curious compulsion from Harrison’s unique stylistic synthesis of Eastern and Western traditions spanning many centuries. The resulting timelessness lends his music a strongly communicative serenity (as exemplified by the Largo third movement), yet there’s also a trance-like concentration and fine craft which ensure that one’s attention rarely wavers. Of the symphony’s four movements, the last is the most immediately striking, featuring as it does a vocalist (here a characterful Al Jarreau) narrating three native-American (or Navajo, to be precise) “Coyote Stories” against a background of gamelan-like percussion sonorities. A similarly luminous, tintinnabulatory backcloth courses through the opening Largo, whereas the outer portions of the ensuing “Stampede” (one of the composer’s favourite terms, actually derived from the medieval dance known as the estampie) exhibit a pungent rhythmic ingenuity that can be traced back over 50 years to Harrison’s Double Music for percussion quartet (an exhilarating collaboration with John Cage dating from 1941, and the final item here).
Elsewhere, we are treated to six numbers from Solstice (one of a clutch of dance works Harrison completed whilst living in New York from 1943 to 1951), which imaginatively deploys an ensemble of flute, oboe, trumpet, two cellos, double-bass, tack-piano and celesta. The Concerto in slendro (1961) for violin, two tack-pianos, celesta and percussion was composed aboard a freighter bound for Tokyo (where Harrison attended the East-West Music Encounter Conference – his first trip to Asia, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation) and takes its name from a five-tone Indonesian mode. The collection kicks off with a touching Elegy written in just three days – August 22nd-24th, 1982 – inscribed to the memory of Calvin Simmons, the young conductor of the Oakland Symphony, and premiered a couple of days later at the Cabrillo Music Festival (a two-week event which also witnessed the first performance of Harrison’s Third Symphony).
I can report that performance- and production-values throughout are beyond reproach, and this uncommonly generous Argo anthology (which is also both expertly annotated and attractively presented) makes a worthy tribute to a likeable figure, who happily celebrated his 80th birthday in May of last year.'
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