TALMA: The Ambient Air / Soundshots / Full Circle
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Louise Talma (1906-96) The Ambient Air Lament 7 Episodes Variations on 13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird Conversations Soundshots Full Circle Louise Talma...
Louise Talma (1906-96)
The Ambient Air Lament 7 Episodes Variations on 13 Ways of Looking at a
Blackbird Conversations Soundshots Full Circle
Louise Talma was the foremost American neo-classical
composer. In her day she was highly acknowledged in
the United States and collected numerous important
awards. Among the many honours she received were
those of being the first woman to win two Guggenheim
Fellowships (1946 and 1947), and the first woman to be
elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters
(1974). She was also the first American woman to have
an opera performed at a major European opera house;
the 1962 Frankfurt première of The Alcestiad, based on
a play by Thornton Wilder, received a twenty minute
standing ovation. She studied at the Institute of Musical
Arts in New York from 1922 to 1930, and, having a
French opera-singer mother, it is not surprising that she
spent thirteen summers, from 1926, at the
Fontainebleau School of Music in France. There she
studied the piano with Isidore Philipp, and harmony,
counterpoint, fugue and composition with Nadia
Boulanger. She herself became a very committed
teacher and taught at Hunter College, CUNY from 1928
to 1979.
Louise Talma's music shows a keen intellectual
mind, but she also engages listeners at a visceral level
and entertains them with her originality and quirkiness.
She frequently combines motor energy, sometimes
associated with Stravinsky, with a beautiful melancholy
expression, and often creates moments of extraordinary
beauty, such as in the Lullaby in Seven Episodes. She
seems to have warmed to the precision of neoclassicism,
the discipline of Boulanger's teaching, and
French lightness of touch. While there are elements that
could be connected to her time in Paris, her language is
quite unique. Her output was substantial and covered a
wide range of genres. She wrote numerous vocal works,
both choral and solo, in which she set a great variety of
texts, from the Bible and Shakespeare to Auden, John F.
Kennedy and e. e. cummings. Her piano works embrace
pieces for children, sonatas and the virtuoso Alleluia in
Form of Toccata.
Apart from Soundshots, all the works on this disc
were written in the 1980s, when Louise Talma was in
her late seventies and early eighties. Her maturity gives
the music a rare, distilled quality. Her musical thinking
has a very focussed precision; textures are generally
transparent; the atmosphere is at times ironic, strange,
even bizarre, at others it has a deeply affecting sadness.
The beauty of her slow music is exceptional.
The Ambient Air, written in 1983 and scored for
flute, violin, cello and piano, is in four movements,
Echo Chamber, Driving Rain, Creeping Fog, and
Shifting Winds. Much of Talma's music is descriptive,
and here we have titles to tell us her thinking. It is
appropriately evocative, and she creates striking
pictures in sound. While the combination of a flute with
a piano trio might suggest something light in effect, she
uses the instrumental colours with great originality to
paint very atmospheric musical illustrations. The first
movement beautifully captures the creepy quality of an
echo chamber. While the rain of the second is
invigorating and energising, it performs a sardonic
dance in the middle. She captures, in the third, the
amorphous and elusive nature of fog. With the
unpredictable nature of wind, the fourth movement
rocks, sways, blows and buffets.
Talma wrote on the score of Lament that this piece
was inspired by a melody heard on a one-string fiddle in
Wadi Rum in Jordan. With minimal resources she has
created a stark yet suggestive piece, redolent of a dry
river bed, and alluding to the wailing emotions of the
Middle East.
The combination of flute, viola and piano is a rare
but a beautiful one. The 7 Episodes are like a concise set
of variations. They open with a doleful yet tender
theme, and journey through episodes of giocoso fun, a
lullaby, some beautifully lyrical sections, a march, and a
swaying 9/8 section, to return to playfulness and a witty
end.
Variations on 13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird,
written in 1979 and scored for tenor, oboe and piano
was commissioned by the American tenor Paul Sperry
as a graduation gift for his oboe-playing niece Jennifer
Sperry. They gave the première, with Talma at the
piano, on 26th February 1980, at Temple University, in
Philadelphia. The distilled and Zen-like qualities of the
words by Wallace Stevens seem particularly suited to
the philosophical qualities in Talma's music.
Conversations was written in 1987 for Patricia
Spencer, flautist of the American chamber group, the
Da Capo Players. Naturally, it is an intimate dialogue,
and it is built episodically. As ever, Talma uses the
instruments in a highly expressive way. Meditative
musings are offset by dazzling flourishes, fragments of
military precision by flowing lyricism.
Soundshots, written between 1944 and 1974, are
crisp and witty miniatures in a rich tradition of teaching
pieces written by great composers, such as Schumann's
Album for the Young, and Bartok's Mikrokosmos.
Talma's fifty year stint at Hunter College shows what a
dedicated teacher she was. Many of the pieces are
delightful examples of musical onomatopoeia. For
students of all ages, the playful titles attract the learner
with their sense of fun.
Full Circle, written in 1985 and scored for chamber
orchestra, is a single movement, built as a sequence of
contrasting episodes. The opening viola solo initiates a
languid section of expressive melancholy. After a burst
of energy in a motor-driven Allegro, the plaintive mood
returns. Another taut rhythmic section introduces a
cryptic Pierrot-like episode for flute and piano. An
ironic waltz leads to a fortissimo outburst, followed by
heavy sighs. Next is a scherzo-like episode, first in 5/8
and then 7/8. Further outbursts bring the music back to
propelling quavers, at times dancing in three, at times as
a mock march. After another outburst, there are more
doleful sighs, and another mocking waltz. Then the
music winds down to return, as the title suggests, to the
atmosphere of the beginning. Talma uses the
instrumental colours to great effect; the line-up includes
a piano, two flutes, a clarinet, some colourful
percussion, and strings. Her flexible sense of rhythm
creates a wonderful freshness in the music.
Diana Ambache
The Ambient Air (more info)
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I. Echo Chamber - 4:35
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II. Driving Rain - 1:34
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III. Creeping Fog - 4:06
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IV. Shifting Winds - 3:20
Lament (more info)
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Lament - 4:51
7 Episodes (more info)
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7 Episodes - 6:44
Variations on 13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird (more info)
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Variations on 13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird - 8:41
Conversations (more info)
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Conversations - 5:19
Soundshots (excerpts) (more info)
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II. The Pony Express - 0:56
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III. Duck Duet - 1:36
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VII. Skipping - 0:30
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VIII. The Robin - 0:42
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XIV. Pitter-Patter Pitter-Patter - 0:52
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XIX. The Clocks - 1:24
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XX. Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep - 1:38
Full Circle (more info)
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Full Circle - 13:15