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Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Tālivaldis Ķeniņš - Symphony No. 1; Two Concertos (Guntis Kuzma; Andris Poga)


Information

Composer: Tālivaldis Ķeniņš
  • Concerto da camera No. 1
  • Concerto for Piano, Percussion & String Orchestra
  • Symphony No. 1

Agnese Egliņa, piano
Latvian National Symphony Orchestra
Guntis Kuzma & Andris Poga, conductors

Date: 2020
Label: Ondine

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Review

Latvian-born Tālivaldis Ķeniņš (also often spelled Kenins, which I use subsequently in this review) received his first musical training in Riga. War, in which he had been conscripted, intervened and he felt the urge to leave the country then under Soviet rule. He left for Paris where he studied with Tony Aubin and Olivier Messiaen. He then left for Canada where he lived all his life, acquiring Canadian nationality, which is why he was first and foremost regarded as a Canadian composer. I for one came to know some of his music listening to Canadian discs.

The three works recorded here span some twenty years of his creative life and thus provide a good survey of his musical progress. The earliest work here is his Symphony No.1, completed in 1959. It is a fairly compact piece of music in which not a single note is wasted. It is laid out in three movements: a rather short and condensed opening Moderato followed by a deeply-felt Largo e sostenuto which is the real emotional core of the entire work, building from a meditative bassoon solo which is soon taken-up by the other instruments to reach a searingly beautiful climax before retracing its way back to the opening mood, which is in turn shattered by the animated final movement characterised by syncopated rhythms and fugal writing of some considerable energy momentarily relieved by calmer episodes before rushing towards its forceful conclusion. The composer was forty when he composed his First Symphony but by then he had clear views about what he was aiming at. He composed seven more symphonies, the Eighth being written in 1986. One might of course think that a composer born in Eastern Europe and having lived there for several formative years would have been influenced by the example of some of his elders such as Shostakovich, but his First Symphony is a strongly personal piece of music.

The Concerto di camera No.1 for piano, flute, clarinet and string orchestra shows another facet of Kenins' musical thinking. It is again laid out in three movements of fairly equal length and displays some elegant neo-classicism in its outer movements, whereas the central Lento cantabile is a quite beautiful, often elegiac piece of music which may sometimes bring some of Bartók's night music to mind. This is clearly not a virtuoso concerto but rather some sort of concerto grosso with important parts for flute and clarinet, superbly played here by flautist Tommaso Pratola and clarinettist Mārtiņš Circenis.

In the summer of 1989, Kenins returned to Latvia for the first time since going into exile. At that time Latvia was still part of the USSR but tensions were already being felt which progressively led to a declaration of independence in May 1990 but also to some severe repression from the Soviet authorities. The Concerto for piano, strings and percussion composed in 1990 clearly reflects on these times, although that might simply be regarded as a vaguely subliminal programme underlying the musical structure and contend of the piece. The composer summed it all up some time later saying that “the texture of the sound might create an impression of impulsive strength and of a confident explosion of sound but it rather points out to feelings of bitterness, anguish, and shock brought on by the tragic recent events in my homeland”. The first movement is full of propulsive, rough-edged energy that may hint at Honegger's music but those feelings are still more to the fore in the beautifully tragic second movement which – once again – brings Bartók's tense counterpoint to mind with extraordinarily gripping impact. The second movement, with its uncompromising logic, is clearly the crux of the entire work. I for one am in no doubt about it: Ķeniņs' Concerto for piano, strings and percussion is a marvellous work which should definitely be much better known and clearly deserves wider exposure.

These three works receive here superbly committed readings aided by some very fine engineering and will hopefully trigger some renewed interest in this composer's music. Anyone with a liking for accessible and strongly expressive contemporary music should certainly consider this and is worth buying for the Concerto for piano, strings and percussion alone, but there is still more to enjoy on this most welcome release.

-- Hubert CulotMusicWeb International


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Tālivaldis Ķeniņš (April 22, 1919 in Liepāja – January 20, 2008 in Toronto) was a Canadian composer. He studied under Jāzeps Vītols in Riga, then at the Paris Conservatory under Tony Aubin and Olivier Messiaen. Ķeniņš moved to Canada in 1951 and began teaching at the University of Toronto, where he taught for 32 years. Canadian musicologist Paul Rapoport has credited Ķeniņš with introducing many European idioms to Canadian art music in an era when many of its composers remained solidly influenced by British models. His works include 8 Symphonies, 12 Concertos, as well as chamber, piano and vocal music.

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Guntis Kuzma is former principal clarinetist of the Latvian National Symphony Orchestra (2008–2014) and the Sinfonietta Rīga chamber orchestra since it was established in 2006 until 2015. He was appointed conductor of the LNSO starting with the 2014/2015 season. Kuzma is both lecturer and former Head of the Department of Wind Instruments at the Jāzeps Vītols Latvian Academy of Music. Besides being an active participant in chamber music projects, Kuzma also enjoys performing contemporary music. He has participated in the first performances of numerous new works both as clarinetist and conductor.

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Andris Poga (born 29 June 1980 in in Riga) is a Latvian orchestral conductor. Poga is a graduate of the Jāzeps Vītols Latvian Academy of Music, where he studied trumpet and conducting. He also studied conducting at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Vienna. Poga was artistic director and principal conductor of the Professional Symphonic Band Rīga (2007-10), then assistant conductor to Paavo Järvi at Orchestre de Paris (2011-14). He became music director of the Latvian National Symphony Orchestra in 2013, and is currently chief conductor of the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra.

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6 comments:

  1. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Free Access with Ads' / 'Get link'. Complete the steps / captchas if require.
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    ReplyDelete
  2. Hello, thank you for share your wonderful selection. Can you please re upload this cd?
    https://musiqclassiq.blogspot.com/2022/11/various-composers-seraph-tine-thing.html?
    Thank you very much!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hello, I wanted to make a suggestion, maybe you could bring this disc in the future.
    https://referencerecordings.com/recording/pittsburgh-beethoven-symphony-5-7/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pues me parece que no es la línea de esta Web. Para Beethoven, sea por Manfred Honeck y Pittsburgh , u otros, hay otras Web.

      Delete