New Classical Albums
Handel: “Gigue” (from the Suite No. 1 in A major)
• Artist: Lisa Smirnova
• Album: Georg Friedrich Händel: Die acht grossen Suiten
• Song: Suite for keyboard (Suite de piece), Vol.1, No.1 in A major, HWV 426 [Gigue]
Handel’s eight keyboard suites, which he published himself in 1720, don’t get a lot of attention these days. Pianist Lisa Smirnova studied these colourful pieces for five years before launching into this recording. The combination of her rhythmically bouyant playing and Handel’s endlessly satisfying melodies — be they in slow laments or sprightly gigues — makes for a very welcome new album.
Rautavaara: “The Carpenter’s Son”
• Artist: Tapiola Children’s Choir
• Album: Einojuhani Rautavaara: Marjatta
• Song: Puusepän poika (The Carpenter’s Son), for SSA chorus
The Finns are crazy about singing. So it’s no surprise that the Tapiola Children’s Choir, founded back in 1963, has made 60 international tours, three of them circling the globe. Finland’s most distinguished living composer, Einojuhani Rautavaara, began writing for the choir in the early 1970s. In this song about a carpenter and his son, one section of the ensemble repeats the Finnish word for “shavings,” mimicking the back-and-forth sound of a carpenter’s plane on wood.
Tod Machover: “Buoyant and Precise” (from Jeux Deux)
• Artist: Michael Chertock
• Album: Tod Machover: … but not simpler …
• Song: Jeux Deux, for hyperpiano & orchestra [Buoyant & Precise]
The hyperpiano is the brainchild of composer Tod Machover, a professor of music at MIT’s Media Lab. Like its siblings the hypercello and hyperviolin, the hyperpiano has technology to extend its sound and expressive range. The hyperpiano starts with a Yamaha Disklavier, a high-tech player piano. Machover has created software such that when a note is struck, several things may happen: It might trigger a volley of additional pre-determined notes played by the Disklavier; process the notes played; or multiply and speed up notes, as in the fireworks heard at the end of this excerpt.
Rachmaninov: “In My Soul” op. 14, No. 10
• Artist: Dmitri Hvorostovsky
• Album: Rachmaninov Romances
• Song: In my soul, song for voice & piano, Op. 14/10
The name Rachmaninov conjures up colossal piano concertos and sweeping symphonies. But the composer also wrote songs — more than 80 of them, all but handful of which go unheard today. Velvet-voiced Siberian baritone Dmitri Hvorostovsky sings 26 Rachmaninov songs on his new album. “In My Soul” finds the protagonist yearning to melt the icy heart of his beloved with the burning passion inside him. I love the slightly exotic coloring Rachmaninov gives the song, which plays perfectly through Hvorostovsky’s plush, dark voice.