FUCHS, K.: Canticle to the Sun / United Artists
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Kenneth Fuchs has written for orchestra, band, chorus, jazz ensemble, and various chamber groups. His first recording for Naxos (8559224) also featured the...
Kenneth Fuchs has written for orchestra, band, chorus, jazz ensemble, and various chamber groups. His first recording for Naxos (8559224) also featured the London Symphony Orchestra under JoAnn Falletta, as well as the orchestra's principal horn player, Timothy Jones. This meeting inspired Fuchs to write the concerto Canticle to the Sun for Jones and United Artists as a tribute to the orchestra. Two of the works on this recording were inspired by paintings: Autumn Rhythm by Jackson Pollock's famous picture of the same name, and Fire, Ice, and Summer Bronze by Helen Frankenthaler, whose art adorns the cover of this disc.
United Artists (more info)
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United Artists - 5:29
Quiet in the Land (more info)
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Quiet in the Land - 12:14
Fire, Ice, and Summer Bronze (more info)
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I. Fire and Ice - 7:06
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II. Summer Bronze - 5:04
Autumn Rhythm (more info)
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Autumn Rhythm - 13:07
Canticle to the Sun (more info)
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Canticle to the Sun - 20:38
Reviews
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Old-fashioned lyricism (Jan 24, 2008)
Reviewer:
Jim Shine
Kenneth Fuchs is currently head of the music department at the University of Connecticut and has, as the CD tells us, written for orchestra, band, chorus, jazz ensemble, and chamber ensembles. On the evidence of this disc, he produces music that's undemanding of its listeners but never shallow.
The first track was written for the LSO, who perform it here. The name United Artists...
Kenneth Fuchs is currently head of the music department at the University of Connecticut and has, as the CD tells us, written for orchestra, band, chorus, jazz ensemble, and chamber ensembles. On the evidence of this disc, he produces music that's undemanding of its listeners but never shallow.
The first track was written for the LSO, who perform it here. The name United Artists of course suggests movies, and the LSO has recorded a lot of music for movies; with these facts in mind it's perhaps no surprise that it sounds the way it does - an orchestral workout that gives everyone something to do, with plenty of fanfarey brass. It's enjoyable.
The other orchestral work on the disc is the final piece, Canticle to the Sun. Based on the hymn that begins “All creatures of our God and King” (I had to look this one up - not a churchgoer), it's a concerto written for horn player Timothy Jones. Essentially it's an easy-going celebration of nature. There are some wonderful moments but on first hearing I felt it meandered a little at times - occasionally it seemed to be building to something but never quite got there. As usually happens, a second listen taken on the piece's own terms makes me like it more. Its peaceful coda is a lovely way to end the disc.
The rest of the program consists of 3 works for various quintet groupings. Quiet in the Land is, according to Fuchs, “purely abstract” but “can also be heard as a sonic ode to... the great Midwestern Plains”. I wonder if anyone with a passing knowledge of 20th-century American music would be able to avoid thinking of it in these latter terms? It's redolent with the pastoral, folky sound we associate with Copland. Scored for flute, cor anglais, clarinet, viola, and cello and mostly in contemplative vein, it's an absolutely gorgeous piece and for me the disc's highlight.
Fire, Ice, and Summer Bronze - from 1986 and the only work here more than 5 years old - is a brass quintet based on a pair of abstract expressionist works by Helen Frankenthaler. The first movement is the fire and ice, meaning restlessness and serenity respectively; these notions do indeed characterize the music. Summer Bronze, the second movement, brings us repose, and it's much more lyrical than what's gone before, with the French horn leading the way beautifully.
Another piece of abstract expressionism appears in the form of the woodwind quintet Autumn Rhythm, inspired by Jackson Pollock's painting of the same name. Initially I was sceptical about the connection; the piece does have what you might call an autumnal feel to it but I couldn't “hear” the painting. But actually looking at the painting while the music played I could see where Fuchs was coming from, and I now “get” the lyricism of Pollock. An intriguing feature of the music is that some of the players change instruments toward the end, so that the piece ends in a lower register than it began. Again, this is a charming and relaxed piece.
Overall, you could view Fuchs' music as rather old-fashioned, but it's none the worse for that. Some composers achieve an effect through conflict, whereas Fuchs appears to achieve his through accord. Feel-good music, you could say.
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