Rorem Chamber Works

Rorem’s expressive chamber music proves to be delightfuilly irrestible in these scintillating accounts

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Ned Rorem

Genre:

Chamber

Label: Naxos

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 60

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: 8 559128

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Book of Hours Ned Rorem, Composer
Fibonacci Sequence (The)
Ned Rorem, Composer
Bright Music Ned Rorem, Composer
Fibonacci Sequence (The)
Ned Rorem, Composer
End of Summer Ned Rorem, Composer
Fibonacci Sequence (The)
Ned Rorem, Composer
In Ned Rorem’s End of Summer (1985) for clarinet, violin and piano, dramatic juxtapositions seem to be the work’s organising principle. Hearing the Gotham Ensemble’s recent recording, I imagined that the lyrical ideas (including quotations, like a memorable turn from Brahms’s Op 111 Quintet – not the Third Symphony, as I mistakenly claimed in my review) were nostalgic, backward glances. But this more forceful interpretation by The Fibonacci Sequence has convinced me that these ideas, although ‘suggested by musical works of yore’ (in the composer’s words), exist very much in the present. Without postmodern trickery, Rorem shows us that seemingly disparate elements can coexist quite happily.

One hears a similar kind of musical détente going on in parts of Bright Music (1987) for flute, two violins, cello and piano – particularly in the opening Fandango, inspired by the image of a rat inside a rubbish bin. This is a substantial, delightful suite, centered on a brilliant scherzo movement (‘Dance- Song-Dance’) that enfolds one of Rorem’s loveliest tunes. The slow movement (entitled ‘Another Dance’) is an expansive, aching song without words, and the whirlwind finale a clever and ultimately unsettling take on the last movement of Chopin’s Funeral March Sonata.

Book of Hours (1975), for flute and harp, is structured on the timetable of monastic prayer, beginning with Matins and continuing through Lauds all the way to Vespers and Compline. There are few sweet melodies here, though Rorem’s language is always expressive. ‘Sext (Noon)’ is especially touching, with the flute’s shakuhachi-like glissandi sighing over the harp’s exquisitely fragile song.

The performances by the Kingston University-based Fibonacci Sequence are consistently polished and persuasive. Clear recording, too, though the instruments are placed very close to the microphones, which can put a bit of an edge on the flute and violin. Very strongly recommended.

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