Klassisk Musikk (Classical Music) 5 out of 5
I really like this album. Lawo has collected five works by Nils Henrik Asheim (b. 1960) that involve brass instruments – from solo tuba, a duo with a percussionist, to an ensemble with twelve performers (plus harp) – for a lively and varied program.
The core element is the Nynorsk Brass Quintet, where a member – Berger Iver Færder – plays solo tuba in the convincing duo Scream Soft (2002). The quintet alone can only be heard in the two versions of the title track, Hornflowers (2019), a mosaic of 22 short vignettes, all named after a Norwegian mountain flower. The names can be recited by the musicians as the title of each vignette; the whole work lasts less than twelve minutes when played this way, as it is done on track 2. Without the spoken element, as on track 6, the final track, the duration will be one minute less. Both versions work very well, and the effect is, as the album booklet’s program author Nina Nielsen aptly describes, “a kind of musical sketchbook in botany“.
The album opens with Singing Stones (2017), a sextet for brass and organ (performed live by Anders Eidsten Dahl) based on the 16th century version of Luther’s Our God he is so firm a castle. Asheim’s treatment of the old hymn is not reverent in the ordinary sense, but the devotion to the melody shows great respect. As an opening track, it is exciting and drew me into the record.
The other tracks do not disappoint. Most exciting is the aforementioned duo, Scream Soft, with Færder and Jennifer Torrence who form an impressive community in the navigation through a musical landscape with thematic escape and special effects – including electronics and Færder’s singing through the tuba. Torrence also plays in Burning Ice (1999), the album’s earliest work. Asheim explains that the idea was «the notion of the movement in the frozen». The brass instruments in this context are the ice, which slowly melts – or burns – from the percussion.
The smallest work requires the largest crew: Grieg’s Chord (1993, rev 2007) is also the only work with a Norwegian title. It is written for quartets with trumpets and horns, three trombones, tuba and harp, and the melodic material is taken from “Solveig’s Song” in Grieg’s Peer Gynt music. It was composed for the Grieg anniversary in 1993 and gives an imaginative treatment of the material and a nice tribute to Norway’s foremost composer, even though the harpist Sunniva Rødland sounds a bit lost in all the brass. (A lesson in how to write for the combination harp and brass is to listen to Hindemith’s Concert Music for piano, brass and harps, Op 49.) Still incredibly great performances, and great sound from Lawo.
Guy Rickards
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