Harper Miracles
A contemporary composer not afraid to tackle the big issue
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Edward (James) Harper
Label: Delphian
Magazine Review Date: 7/2008
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 59
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: DCD34069

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Three Folk Settings |
Edward (James) Harper, Composer
Edinburgh Quartet Edward (James) Harper, Composer |
Scena |
Edward (James) Harper, Composer
Edward (James) Harper, Composer Louise Paterson, Cello |
Scena II |
Edward (James) Harper, Composer
Anna Jones, Flute Edward (James) Harper, Composer Edward Harper, Piano Louise Paterson, Cello |
Symphony No 2 |
Edward (James) Harper, Composer
David Wilson-Johnson, Baritone Edward (James) Harper, Composer Garry Walker, Conductor Scottish Chamber Orchestra Scottish Chamber Orchestra Chorus |
Author: Arnold Whittall
Finding a living musical language for such texts is no easy task, and Harper’s symphony lacks the edge, as well as the concentration and vitality so palpable in the smaller, shorter pieces that complete the disc. In particular, the Three Folk Settings for string quartet are quite masterly in the way their allusions to familiar folk materials are framed: forcefully in “The Lowlands of Scotland”, poignantly in “The Ash Grove” and with great good humour in “Mairi’s Wedding”.
Perhaps it is too easy for contemporary composers to “do” bleakness and melancholy, and to avoid sentimentality and earnestness, by shunning precisely the kind of topics Harper confronts in the symphony. It would certainly be interesting to discover how successfully another major work, his opera The Spire (based on William Golding’s novel) manages to realise its own big issues: and the two pieces called Scena included here, which relate to the opera, promise well in their forthrightness and expressive energy. All the performances seem admirable in commitment and character, with David Wilson-Johnson in particularly fine voice in the symphony. The recordings of the chamber works are first-rate, but that of the symphony risks too close a focus: a more spacious acoustic would have been preferable.
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