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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Eclectic set of modern compositions - recommended,
By
This review is from: José Serebrier: Symphony No. 3 and other works (Audio CD)
Given all the great classical music that has been composed overthe centuries, it's not easy for a modern composer to find his or her own niche'. Some resort to bizarre tonal structures or other contrivances to sound "modern." The music that Mr. Serebrier, a well-known conductor, composed for this CD, sounds fresh and contemporary, but he doesn't overdo trying to sound modern. Rather the technique he uses on a number of tracks is to emphasize the strings to create a atmosphere of mystery, mystery to provoke the listener to go into a meditative state of psychological reflection. Much of the time his style works very well, as on the 10th track, "Momento psicologico." In other instances, like the second and third movements of his newly composed third symphony, I felt that the mood was too meditative, too repetitive in that sense. Yet the first movement of the symphony is a real "grabber," and the final movement, with a beautiful female singing arrangement, is very fine, and leaves you fulfilled with the work. Perhaps if I had the opportunity to hear this piece performed live I would realize that it is wholly great. Finally, I found the intensity of mood perhaps labored to the point of brooding in the last 2 pieces, which are ironically dedicated to couples who are close friends of the composer - one would think they might be uplifting to symbolize friendship! Maybe this is the composer's giving voice to the quiet angst many feel in these (troubled) times. This CD is also like a "greatest hits" of the composer. It contains an amazingly mature work he composed when he was only 14, "Elegy for Strings," while the third symphony discussed above was composed 50 years later. In addition to these works, the CD contains a very well-composed and performed 2-movement composition for the accordion, which the composer states he had never composed for. This spatial piece, again also including the strings for "inner reflection," would make a great soundtrack for an old-style, romantic, European movie! My compliments again to Naxos for making their fine recordings
2.0 out of 5 stars
Dull and dreary,
By
This review is from: José Serebrier: Symphony No. 3 and other works (Audio CD)
José Serebrier is a well-respected conductor and one of the more starry names in the Naxos catalogue. It is thus perhaps for contractual reasons that Naxos has proceeded to record some of his output as a composer, for these generally dreary, brooding works have little to recommend to them apart from keeping a good conductor in the company's rooster. The early Elegy, written when the composer was fourteen, sets the tone - it is surprisingly skillful for a fourteen year old, but doesn't stand if evaluated on purely musical terms. The Momento psicológico is representative of the mature composer, with its restrained, elegiac drama and utter lack of anything even remotely memorable, virtually indistinguishable from the equally dull Fantasia. The Passacaglia and Perpetuum Mobile is, unusually enough, scored for accordion and chamber orchestra, and pretty much realizes all worries one might have in advance concerning what a mediocre, conventionally oriented contemporary composer could do with such a setting.
The third symphony was, according to the composer, completed in a weak - which would have been an admirable feat if it hadn't sounded like it was. It consists of an energetic first movement, undistinguished but finely orchestrated, followed by three brooding, meandering slow ones (leading one to suspect that the composer's general idea was that it takes shorter time to fill out pages with arbitrary dots if it is supposed to be played slowly than if it were to be played fastly), employing, predictably enough, a chorus in the final one. There are a couple of other works, but I don't think there is much point in going on. The performances are of course authorative, the technical adeptness of the players never in doubt - they make what they can of it - and the sound quality is fine. But this is a lost cause, and if Serebrier is to go on composing music, can no one at least tell him that starting a work slowly in the low strings is generally a bad idea, at least if you do it more or less all the time.
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