Wuorinen: 6 Trios
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Charles Wuorinen (b. 1938) Six Trios For all Charles Wuorinen's longstanding reputation as a modernist, the arc of his musical career has more in common...
Charles Wuorinen (b. 1938)
Six Trios
For all Charles Wuorinen's longstanding reputation as a
modernist, the arc of his musical career has more in
common with those of Brahms and Beethoven than with
any contemporary model. Like many of his great
predecessors, Wuorinen developed and refined his
distinctive style and rigorous craft through the very
work of composition, through the life of being a
composer. Since his co-founding of the Group for
Contemporary Music with Harvey Sollberger in 1962,
that life has encompassed not only the writing of music
but also conducting, piano performance, and teaching,
all pursuits that have informed and enhanced
Wuorinen's sense of his own music. His music, from his
earliest pieces through the more recent masterworks,
can be seen as a body of work as significant as one is
likely to encounter.
The works on this disc, all trios of diverse
combinations, of similar length, all commissions, and all
written in the early 1980s, might at first seem like too
small a sample from which to consider Wuorinen's
music as a whole. Still, the ways in which the composer
approaches the four types of ensemble here illustrate his
participation in that tradition of the ensemble genre that
has been a lure for generations of Western composers.
The piano trio - piano, violin, cello - originated in the
classical era; it was with this that Beethoven established
his post-Mozartian credentials in the early 1790s.
Mendelssohn, Brahms, and Dvofiak, and many other
later composers, made notable contributions. More
uniquely, the horn trio's archetype is Brahms's Opus 40,
which has been virtually a genre unto itself. In recent
decades the horn trio repertoire has expanded greatly.
The other two trios are truly sui generis, at least for
now. That these two trios were commissioned for the
specific forces - double bass, bass trombone, and tuba in
the one case; trombone, piano, and mallet percussion in
the other - takes nothing away from the Platonic solidity
of their combinations as Wuorinen has treated them: the
music of these pieces is inextricable from the
fundamental character of the instruments involved. The
composer is endlessly sympathetic to the interplay of
the techniques, timbres, even "personalities" that are the
carriers of his musical expression. (The opening
moments of the Trio for Bass Instruments epitomize this
awareness.) Taking together the familiar genres here
with the unique, we have a further sense of Wuorinen's
connections with the Western musical traditions of the
past as well as of the modern. Ultimately, of course,
these contexts are by-products of the composer's
primary concern, which is to create a piece of music
artistically satisfying to composer, performers, and
listener.
The wonderfully blithe Trio for Bass Instruments
was commissioned by tubist David Braynard, to whom
it is dedicated. Wuorinen wrote it over the course of
some six weeks between 3rd October and 13th
November, 1981, completing it in Corpus Christi,
Texas. Perhaps surprisingly, this is the most lyrical of
the works here: the flexible, almost improvisatorysounding
melodies, like the shared one for bass
trombone and tuba just moments from the beginning,
have the quality of Middle Eastern or Byzantine vocal
music. The easy flow of these lines never hinders the
strong sense of pulse typical of Wuorinen's music.
Horn Trio and Horn Trio Continued were both
commissioned by Julie Landsman, who since 1985 has
been Principal Horn of the Metropolitan Opera
Orchestra. Horn Trio dates from 1981. Here the
repeated notes of the very start in piano and violin,
intensified in the horn's flutter-tongue entry, are a key
element throughout the work. Wuorinen's treatment of
the three instruments is of particular interest: unison or
textural couplings of two of the three instruments occur
quite frequently, creating temporarily a single metainstrument
in counterpoint to the autonomous third
player. Throughout the piece, powerfully driven music
contrasts with passages of sustained, but still forwardmoving,
lyricism.
Horn Trio Continued, completed in May 1985, may
be played independently of Horn Trio or as a second
movement to that work. Its character, in relation to Horn
Trio, is less impulsive than buoyant, even playful; the
horn is perhaps a little more prominent as leader of the
trio, and its distinctive "stopped" timbre is used with
greater frequency here. There are readily audible crossreferences
to Horn Trio, as well: for example, Horn
Trio's opening gesture appears in Horn Trio Continued
as a corollary to the prevalence of repeated pitches in
the texture.
Wuorinen wrote the Trio for Violin, Cello, and
Piano between 28th May and 2nd August, 1983, in
response to a commission from the Arden Trio. In
common with the rest of the works on this disc, the
musical content is essentially motivic, although in
Wuorinen's music (like Beethoven's) the "motive" is
less a fragment of tune as a complex gesture with
specific melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic qualities. The
most prominent gesture, present already at the start of
the piece, appears in its clearest form at measure 67
(2:34), to be restated verbatim (with slightly different
articulation) five bars later (2:57). Close listening will
reveal numerous transformations of this fragment as one
of the main arguments of the piece. Generally quite
active, the Trio from time to time settles on a (relatively)
sustained chord, foreshadowing the seemingly
breathless repose of the final bars.
Double Solo for horn, violin, and piano was
commissioned by Speculum Musicæ for their fifteenth
anniversary; the piece is dedicated to violinist Benjamin
Hudson and horn player William Purvis, and was
completed in late December 1985. Although for the
same forces as the two horn trios, Double Solo, as its
title implies, treats the instruments in fundamentally
different fashion: the horn and violin parts together
fulfill one complex solo role (a stance hinted at already
in certain passages of the earlier horn trio pieces), with
the piano as accompaniment. The texture is much more
linear, contrapuntal, the flow and character much more
consistent than in the other horn trios. The opening
gesture, split between horn and violin - a rising, then
falling arpeggio - already indicates their partial
symbiosis. At the same time the potential spatial range
of the piece is (nearly) encompassed: the piano falls
quickly to a chord whose bass is the lowest A on the
piano while the violin lands on A-sharp a tenth above
the staff. Such radical bifurcations, used motivically, are
a common occurrence in the Double Solo. Its rarer
counterpart (very Wuorinen, as one hears in many of
these pieces) is a series of insistently repeated notes.
The title of Trombone Trio already indicates the
primacy of that instrument in the unusual and resonant
texture of the work. The work was written in June and
July 1985 to fulfill a commission from then-Parnassus
trombonist Ronald Borror; the unusual instrumentation
was determined in discussion between Borror and the
composer. Along with the trombone soloist and piano,
the percussionist alternates seamlessly between
shimmering vibes (with and without motor) and earthy
marimba; the continual recombination of timbres is one
of the work's most beautiful traits. Prominent elements
include insistently repeated notes, such as those
presented "off the beat" by the trombone against a
steady piano pulse, just following the brief, sustained
introductory measure, with similar moments in the
piano [0:35; 1:47, etc.], where the performer mutes the
relevant string with a finger. The big form of this piece
is very clearly delineated by a couple of significant
pauses: at measure 128 (5:13) and again at measure 254,
between which occur passages of manically increased
tempo. Following the second, a foreshortened repeat of
the opening measure of the piece signals the onset of the
brief concluding coda.
Robert Kirzinger