Husa, Copland, Vaughan Williams, Hindemith / Eastman Wind Ensemble

Regular price $17.99
Label
CBS Masterworks
Release Date
April 22, 2009
Format
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    Featuring
    • COMPOSER
      VAUGHAN WILLIAMS, RALPH
    • ORCHESTRA / ENSEMBLE
      Eastman Wind Ensemble
    • PERFORMER
      Donald, Hunsberger
    Product Details
    • RELEASE DATE
      April 22, 2009
    • UPC
      074644491623
    • CATALOG NUMBER
      SONY44916
    • LABEL
      CBS Masterworks
    • NUMBER OF DISCS
      1
    • GENRE

An unusually intriguing program. There is no better wind band curtain-raiser than Vaughan Williams's Toccata marziale, and his Variations for brass is from his 'autumn' years, boldly harmonized and dark hued.

Telarc may well have spoiled us forever with their exceptional recordings of this marvellous band. CBS miss something of the bloom, the ripeness and range of the sonorities with their tighter and drier imaging. But it's a harsh comparison on which to start and I wouldn't want to discourage you from investigating an unusually intriguing programme. There is, of course, no better wind band curtain-raiser than Vaughan Williams's Toccata marziale, a classic of its kind, despatched here with all due regimental swagger, but I have returned already to Donald Hunsberger's expanded scoring of the richly inventive Variations for brass band. Here's a piece from Vaughan Williams's 'autumn' years, boldly harmonized and dark hued, bearing something of Percy Grainger's celtic bleakness in its moments of solitude. The low brasses are generously accommodated (and tellingly supported here by string bass and harp), there are piccolo trumpets and flugelhorns, indeed the whole gamut of possibility on offer from the contemporary American wind band. This is a beautifully made scoring from one who plainly knows his forces from the inside.

For the rest, we've the baby brother of Hindemith's Symphony for concert band—his earlier Konzertmusik for wind: an edgy, slightly sinister mix of poker-faced military gestures and an almost enforced Weillian jazziness shot through with Hindemith's dry, characteristically academic counterpoints. Each to his own. Karel Husa's Music for Prague 1968 is essentially a dramatic colour piece, a cry from the heart for a lost homeland, full of obvious Nationalistic symbols: a recurrent bird-call (symbol of liberty), an old Hussite war-song (symbol of resistance), feverish climaxes built upon fanfares of distress, bells of alarm and victory remembered from the ancient Czech capital's countless church towers. What counts here is impact, visceral impact, and Husa's musical engineering is entirely geared to just that.

-- Gramophone [11/1989]