30 June 2005
By Roger Thomas
BBC Music Magazine
original link
Performance:****
Sound: ****
Ironically, one of the 21st centurys most positive musical developments is the way in which 20th-century music is finally being performed with the competence that comes when the interpreters have grown up with the music. This is surely the case with this vibrant ensemble, which treats Rzewskis music with an exact and necessary balance of passion and puckishness. The Pocket Symphony was written for this ensemble and, as the title implies, theres a sense of elegant miniaturisation to the piece, which expertly hints at a whole range of traditions ranging from American modernism to ballroom dancing in a series of hyper-condensed sections. Avoiding slickness, the group tackles the piece with the kind of enthusiasm it demands, its members clearly enjoying the improvised cadenzas indicated by the composer.
Les Moutons de Panurge is perhaps one of Rzewskis best-known works and carries some wonderful anecdotes within its history which I wont waste space on here, but I can say that this witty additive-then-subtractive composition transfers perfectly to mixed instrumentation from its original conception as a piece for recorders. The final piece has a slightly makeweight quality about it, but it does have two impossible acts to follow. There are many examples of Rzewskis ensemble and solo piano works (including Panurge) available on such labels as Stradivarius, but I really cant identify a more enjoyable selection.
Copyright © BBC Music Magazine