Gramophone – September 2019

(singke) #1
gramophone.co.uk GRAMOPHONE SEPTEMBER 2019 69

Erika Fox – like
Alexander Goehr,
four years her senior –
came to England with
her family as a small child in the 1930s, to
escape Nazi persecution. She has declared
that ‘my music owes almost nothing to
Western musical tradition, and almost
everything to my childhood memories of
Jewish liturgical chant and fragments of
Hasidic melody’. Nevertheless, the four
compositions on this disc, written between
1980 and 2005, have a much wider
expressive profi le than such purely ethnic
aspects might suggest; and with that
profi le comes impressive technical
resourcefulness. It’s all a long way from
mere idiosyncrasy.
Take Quasi una cadenza, a 13-minute
piece for clarinet, horn and piano, which
manages to transform the expansive
sense of freedom that cadenzas in
concertos often display into a shapely
structure that builds to a powerfully
dramatic conclusion. The material,
conveying an engaging variety of moods,
has the kind of rhapsodic spontaneity that,
in the earlier Paths Where the Mourners
Tread, leads to a certain looseness of


form. But even there – the title is a line
from Philip Larkin – the blend of the
elegiac and the abrasive is compelling,
and very well conveyed by these
performers in a recording that catches
the evolving interactions of the ensemble
with vivid immediacy.
You might expect a composition called
On Visiting Stravinsky’s Grave at San
Michele to intensify the elegiac tone but
it is launched with a positively jaunty
idea – the composer calls it ‘bold and
direct’ – as if to encapsulate that special
Stravinskian energy and confi dence which
Fox has found inspiring. Here too an
unambiguously positive spirit is at work,
and the formal plan of bringing initial
contrasts gradually closer together, so that
difference transforms into connectedness,
is particularly satisfying.
The last two works both have wartime
associations. In Malinconia militaire, from
2003, Fox channels her concerns over
the Iraq war through music inspired by a
poem called ‘Webern Opus 4’ by Amelia
Rosselli, an Italian writer and musician
whose father and uncle were murdered for
their resistance to Mussolini, while Café
Warsaw 1944 references a poem by
Czesπaw Miłosz mourning friends who
did not survive the Second World War.
In both, Fox does justice to these potent

poetic resonancesintexturesthatmove
persuasively betweenhauntinglaments
and vigorous affirmations–andtheuse
of percussion inCaféWarsaw 1944 is
especially telling.Onthisevidence,more
of Erika Fox’s musicondiscwouldbevery
welcome. ArnoldWhittall

Holliger.Kurtág
‘Zwiegespräche’
Holliger Airs. BerceusepourM.Lecture.DieRos’
(Angelus Silesius).SonateKurtágAngelus
Silesius: Die Ros’. EinenAugenblicklang.... Ein
Brief aus der FerneanUrsula....fürHeinz....Der
Glaube (Péter Bornemisza).Hommageà Elliott
Carter. ... (Hommageà Tristan).Innomine–
all’ongherese (Damjanichemlékkö).Kroó
György in memoriam.LorandGaspar:Désert.
Rozsnyai Ilona in memoriam.... einSappho-
Fragment. Schatten.... summaiaa BP.Versetto
(apokrif organum)
Sarah Wegener sopHeinzHolligerob/corang/pf
Marie-Lise Schüpbachob/corang
Ernesto Molinari bcl/contrabasscl
ECM New Series F 4818265 (74’• DDD)

This disc celebrates
the 80th birthday of
Heinz Holliger, and
although it explores

CHAMBER REVIEWS

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Rediscover Sir Simon Rattle’s
first concert as Music Director
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Available 6 September
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