NativeDSD Blog
At a time when Streaming music has become the norm, some courageous labels continue to serving the small market of discerning music lovers with the best attainable quality in high resolution. Yarlung Records is such a label.
For serious listening, only the best will do. Downloading has the enormous advantage of not having to wait for the postman to deliver (or not, as sometimes happens) a new and much anticipated album. Thanks to a dedicated site like Native DSD, instant service has become a real alternative.
So, here we are. I have downloaded Yarlung’s latest contribution to the niche market: Women and War and Peace, an intriguing title. Especially now that a part of Europe is once more under siege. According to the executive producers, Evan Flaschen and & Patrick Trostle, this release is about “performing works by women composers displaced or destroyed by 200 years of European wars”. All of it was new to me: The label, the pianist, and the music. That does not happen so often. It made me all the more curious.
Unlike some commercial giants, Yarlung has a philosophy that appeals very much to me. Not recording a handful of well-known artists or reissuing remastered stuff of the past, but bringing “fresh musicians to the Jazz and Classical Music worlds” and in doing so with “sound as close to living performance as possible”.
Katelyn Bouska is a “lightning-smart academic at Curtis Institute”, says Patrick. This Czech-American researcher “spends many months a year performing and lecturing in Prague”, so we learn from the liner notes. Her specialty: Central and Eastern European composers.
Katelyn Bouska may be a lightning-smart academic, she’s an excellent pianist as well. Probably not a household name for everyone, but still an artist with a charismatic influence, able to “engaging audiences in the musical dialogue”. It would seem to me, however, that it is not solely the artistry that counts. Although the recording dates from before the Russian attack on Ukraine, under the current circumstances it is a painful reminder of the brutal consequences of unprovoked aggression.
The various and varying pieces of Katelyn’s recital are obviously not all of the same standard. But here, too, it is in my view more about the importance of exploring a valuable musical document than getting a whole range of re-discovered masterpieces. Some are good, others are better. Nonetheless, all of them are evenly well played by Paní Bouska.
Track one was a surprise. Chopin? Yes, but. After a somewhat brooding start, the Polish composer enters somewhere in the middle of Caroline Shaw’s ‘Gustave Le Gray’, paying tribute to Chopin’s wistful A minor Mazurka developing into a personalized version. There is more Mazurey on track 2, but this time it is Kate’s own arrangement of some of Szymanowska’s elegant Mazurkas.
Rather than delving into each of the compositions I recommend reading the producer’s liner notes. In doing so, one gets in-depth information about the rest of the works and all the other female composers, thus broadening our scope and knowledge of Central and Eastern European composing, which after all is Bouska’s field of research at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.
Putting things together, Katelyn and Yarlung provide us with a valuable album that needs to be further explored. The producers should be commended for their continuing effort to produce the best in terms of culture and sound. As well as for giving artists such as Katelyn Bouska a real chance to shine.
Adrian Quanjer
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