Northwest Reverb - Reflections by James Bash and others about classical music in the Pacific Northwest and beyond - not written by A.I.
Monday, December 30, 2013
Lori Presthus - cellist and visual artist - passes
It is with sadness that I have to make note of the death of Lori Presthus, the Portland-based cellist who was a member of the Portland Baroque Orchestra. She passed away on November 20 at age 57. According to this obituary, she had a re-occurrence of cancer. In addition to her expertise with the cello, Presthus excelled in painting and jewelry making. I had the pleasure of interviewing her and writing it up for Oregon Music News. Presthus was a remarkable person, and she will be missed in the Portland community.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Carlos Kalmar talks about conducting and much more
Carlos Kalmar, is now in his 11th season as music director of the Oregon Symphony, and he recently signed a contract extension that will keep him on the podium through June of 2018. Under Kalmar, the orchestra continues to play at an extremely high level. Highlights of his tenure include the orchestra's highly acclaimed performance at Carnegie Hall and two recordings (one of which received a Grammy nomination) under the Pentatone label. Now the orchestra is wrapping up its third CD and is partly done with another recording of Haydn symphonies, despite being under a lot of financial pressure. So, a few days after the orchestra’s performance of Britten’s “War Requiem” in early November, I met with Kalmar at Caffe D’arte in NE Portland and peppered him with questions. Here is most of our conversation:
Congratulations on
your contract extension.
Kalmar: Thank you!
Does your job pretty
different from day to day? That is, do you go into the office in the morning
have meetings and then meet with a board member or something like that?
Kalmar: My job is very different from a 9 to 5 job.
The most routine part of the job is rehearsal with the orchestra. On a day with
two rehearsals the first goes from 9:30 to 12:30 and the second from 1:30 to
3:30. Afterwards there may be meetings or dinner with donors, but what is
routine about that? Rehearsals are always different. Basically, there is no
routine.
Now that you’ve been
working with the orchestra many years, and many of them know your podium style
and might intuit what you want, do they respond faster and better?
Kalmar: I would say both. They are very fast. That happened ten days ago when Christian and
Tanja Tetzlaff were here for the Brahms Double Concerto. The first thing that I
have to mention, though, was that Christian told me that our orchestra is the
best one that he had ever played Brahms with, and that included the big name
orchestras. He also remarked that this orchestra is insanely fast.
The orchestra and I are accustomed to each other and there’s
a certain pace that we have. So we can dig into the piece very quickly. You don’t
have to spend a huge amount of time on things that ultimately are on the technical
side of music making. That was never a big issue here in Portland, but now it’s
considerably less important. For the last couple of years, there is no piece in
the orchestral repertoire that would make this orchestra blink. That was not
the case ten years ago. Certain pieces were a stretch back then. Of course, you
always have to push the limits. Now the limits are way up there, and the possibilities
of these musicians in this orchestra are astounding.
I have to admit that
I’ve heard some incredible performances by you and the orchestra. Some of which
I thought were better than the recording that I had heard. Like the Britten "War
Requiem" that you did.
Kalmar: That can happen when and if the performance is
good, and when and if the performance is meaningful. Having the visceral
presence of you in the room and what this piece does is astonishing. You can’t
get that feeling when you are in front of the best technical equipment in the
world. The recording that Britten
himself did with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Peter Pears, and Galina Vishnevskaya
is an amazing recording, but It simply cannot compare to a great live
experience.
I want, in my own way of reading a score as close to what I
think the composer meant. Of course, I always look through my own lens. If
someone denies the personality of the interpreter, then he is lying.
You do many pieces
for the umpteenth time, and other pieces you conduct for the first time ever.
How do you make the warhorse sound fresh?
Kalmar: When you do a piece for the first time, of
course, there is a thrill. You study the piece and learn it for the first time.
It’s an exciting thing, and when you do it; it is what it is. Then when I get
to do the same piece a second, third, or fourth time, the familiarity allows
you to dig deeper into the music. Let’s
take the Britten War Requiem. You don’t get the chance to do this piece very
often. This was my third time. The first time was a memorable experience, but because
I am now more familiar with the work, I think that this latest performance was
way better, because of my experience with the piece.
But let’s take a piece that I’ve done more than three times,
like a Tchaikovsky symphony that I’ve done twenty five times. On one side, the familiarity
helps you greatly, but on the other side, it’s a danger. What has to happen and what you have to be aware of is to look at the piece as
if you were doing it for the first time.
Actually, this issue is coming up for me with the piece that
I have done the most in my life, Beethoven’s 9th. I’ll be conducting
it five times with the Seattle Symphony at the end of December and the
beginning of January, and two times with my orchestra here in Portland. This will be the first time to do Beethoven’s
9th at the end of the year in Portland. We will see if it will become
a Portland tradition. The first half will have a cavalcade of stars: Thomas
Lauderdale, China Forbes, Storm Large, the von Trapps Gus van Sant, and the
second half will have the Beethoven. The great thing about Beethoven’s 9th,
is that is one of those pieces where you can always discover things that you’ve
never heard before, and you try to bring them to life.
Did you decide to record
the Haydn symphonies because the string section is so very good?
Kalmar: After we had such success with our first
recording, “Music for a Time of War” and we were preparing the second
recording,” This England,” we talked to the head artistic person at Pentatone –
we met at the airport in Chicago – it was very funny because we were coming
from three different places. I came from
Portland. The Soundmirror guys came from Boston, and Job Maarse came from
Amsterdam. He was on his way to San Francisco. So we took time in Chicago to
talk. I talk about I would like to record, and the recording company tells me
what they can do. They might say, “Well, we just did this.” I presented the
American CD that we will be finishing in January with Copland’s Third Symphony.
We are retouching that one because it is an extremely difficult piece. That CD will include Walter Piston’s “The Incredible
Flutist” and George Antheil’s “Jazz Symphony.” I also mentioned Joseph
Haydn. They immediately replied that
they thought I could do something interesting with Joseph Haydn. So that’s how
the Haydn recording came about.
You have performed a
lot of new works by Aaron J. Kernis, Thomas Adès , James MacMillian, John
Adams, Narong Prangcharoen, and others. What new composers are you looking
forward to perform?
Kalmar: I am very happy to have done works by those
composers and others like Andrew Norman, Tomas Svoboda, Robert Kyr, and I’m
hoping to do a piece by David Schiff – probably not next season but soon
afterwards. I am always looking at new works. It’s a matter of cost and the
necessity of selling tickets. It’s easier for me to program new pieces with the
Grant Park Orchestra because of the funding there.
Do you own a whole
bunch of conductor’s scores?
Kalmar: Yes.
But if you don’t have
the conductor’s score, you can always rely on the orchestra’s library?
Kalmar: Yes. And having access to three orchestral
libraries is an enormous advantage. I’m
very fortunate in that regard.
What was the very first
piece that you ever conducted?
Kalmar: Schubert’s 3rd. I conducted it without any training at all. I
had played in orchestras as a violinist since I was 12 years old. Everything I knew was by observation. So when
I went to the podium and started conducting, nothing went wrong.
It must have been a
great feeling.
Kalmar: It was great. But with conducting, like everything
else in life, even when you have some talent, some things go well, but
sometimes things fail. And it is likely that thing fail way more often when you
are young. So, I did my fair share of failures, and it’s not easy to recover
from failures. But in the long run, the failures are important, because failure
lets you learn something. You might be angry at first that something didn’t go
the way you thought it would. Then you have to learn what you can do to make it
better. I’m still learning. I may be quicker in figuring out what I can do to
help.
You seem to be
comfortable in every genre of symphonic music: from Baroque to the newest, most
contemporary work. And it doesn’t matter if you are conducting an American
piece, an English piece, a German piece, a French piece. How do you do that?
Kalmar: I think that I can do this because of two
things: first, my absolute refusal to be labeled. Even more than 20 years ago,
I didn’t like the idea of becoming identified with one genre. And at that time,
my repertoire was a tenth of what it is now. Secondly, I think that you have to
curious. Be curious as a musician. And that’s how I’ve built, over many years,
an enormous repertoire. I think that I’ll be guest conducting with an orchestra
next year where they are asking me to do a new piece. Why not? It’s exciting to
me to learn something new. It broadens my horizons.
You’re always listed
as one of the top monetary donors to the Oregon Symphony. Since the musicians have had to take a big
pay cut, have you upped your donations?
Kalmar: I do my donations voluntarily, and I’ve always
very silent about my donations, but I would be very surprised if there were
another music director in America who donates as much. Every week that I
conduct, I donate a portion to the Oregon Symphony. The truth is, as silly as
it sounds, I don’t know how much it is. As a music director, I’m being paid
accordingly. I am in the medium range of salaries of music directors for
orchestras this size. I’m not sure how much I donated last year, but I think
that it was around $44,000. This year it may be more money. I have more
engagements. The Beethoven Ninths that I am doing here are donations. I am not
collecting a fee to conduct those concerts. My orchestra is in a bad financial
situation. It’s important for the orchestra’s key donors to realize that my
wife and I donate this type of money, which, for us, is not little. I also feel
that my acceptance of the renewal of my contract is a commitment to Portland.
Of course, since your
name is listed with the violinist Raffaela Wahby in the donor’s page, I
guessing that you got married. Did that happen last summer?
Kalmar: It was in May.
Congratulations!
Kalmar: Thank you!
Friday, December 20, 2013
Portland Symphonic Choir and guest artists stoke up the warmth in Wintersong! concert
The Portland Symphonic Choir served up large helpings of
sonic warmth at its Wintersong! concert on Saturday evening (December 14) at
St. Mary’s Cathedral. Embracing the holiday
music of many cultures, the choir’s program offered a sumptuous spread of
choral pieces from all over the globe and, to top that off, many of its members
wore ethnically-garnished dress.
Guest songwriter, pianist, and vocalist Naomi LaViolette
started the concert with her gorgeous arrangement of Noel. After introducing
the melody while playing the piano, the 100-plus members of the choir seamlessly
slipped into the stream of music and gradually split it into parts. With a
generous burst of volume the piece reached a glorious climax with the words “Noel,
born is the king of Israel.” That was a wonderful opener, and it would be
interesting to hear another collaboration between LaViolette and the choir in
the near future.
Steven Zopfi’s arrangement of “Many and Great, O God Are Thy
Things” was impressively sung by the women of the choir. They enveloped the audience
in a very smooth and strong melody that in a unison “ooo” that was simply
beautiful. After a while the sound split
into alto and soprano voices and some of the text was “Great Spirit, show us
the way, show us the path of peace.”
Under Zopfi, the choir sang two arrangements by Elliot
Levine. “Al Hanisim,” invoked Hanukkah, and featured underlying repetitive line
that the choir propelled faster and faster so that the prayerful text became
more urgent and real. The second piece “Lo V’chayil” (“Not by might”) used a
much slower tempo and tones in a lower range to create a serious and
affirmative mood. Soprano Carley Kassab and tenor Brian Haskins distinguished
themselves with exposed solos near the end of the piece.
Zopfi also led the choir in spirited performance of “Gloria
A Dios” (“Glory to God”) by Michael Mendoza, who, in addition to his composing
activities, is the Director of Choral Activities at The College of New Jersey. Gloria
A Dios” is a brief piece in five sections for choir, soloists, and a small
chamber ensemble, and the music is joyful and almost bouncy at times. Tenor
David Foley sang with terrific presence in the quartet that included excellent contributions
from soprano Gail D’Aloiso, mezzo Rachel Portnoy-Bradley, and bass Jim Imhoff.
Guided by Kathryn Lehmann, the choir delivered Paul
Christiansen’s lively arrangement of “Jeg er saa glad” (“I am so glad”) with élan.
The verses in which the women delved
into embellishments while the men sang the melody evoked the image of ice
skating on a Scandinavian lake. The singing of “Lo How a Rose E’er Blooming, in
a setting that Swedish composer Jan Sandström based on music by Michael
Praetorius , went in the opposite direction, using humming and closely related
notes to create a thick, foggy carpet of sound from which emerged the glowing
melodic line.
Lehmann also conducted the choir in “The Seven Joys of Chirstmas” by Kirke Mechem, which
included a medley of familiar carols from England, France, Germany, and Spain,
plus a New Year Song from Japan. The music was beautiful, but the text got a
bit muddied, and “Fum, fum, fum!” could have used a faster tempo. Denise
Fujikawa provided outstanding accompaniment on the harp.
As part of the Wintersong tradition, the Portland
Symphonic Choir invites a Portland metro
high school choir to participate in the concert. This year’s invitee was the
Grant High School Royal Blues, a 32-voice chamber ensemble that has maintained
a high standard over many years as one of Oregon’s best high school. Under its
new director, John Eisemann, the ensemble sounded very good, giving lovely
performances of “Shchedrik” (the Ukrainian carol of the bells), “Wexford Carol”
(an Irish carol), “Ukuthula,” (traditional South African song), and “I am But a
Small Voice” (by Roger Whittaker in a arrangement by John Coates Jr.), which
included hand gestures that symbolized the text.
Interspersed with the featured pieces were four carols: “O
come All Ye Faithful,” “Hark! The Hearld Angels Sing,” “Joy to the World,” and “Silent
Night.” Members of the audience were encouraged to sing along, and they got a
terrific jump start by members of the choir, who surrounded them for the first
couple of verses of each selection. The concert ended with the PSC and the
Royal Blues singing the “Hallelujah”
form Handel’s “Messiah,” a sure fire way to get everyone up and applauding with
smiles before heading out into the chilly December air.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Oregon Symphony shines under conductor Thierry Fischer and with violinist Elina Vähälä
The Oregon Symphony combined with Swiss conductor Thierry
Fischer and Finnish violinist Elina Vähälä to give an exceptional concert of
works by Sergei Prokofiev, Magnus Lindberg, and Pyotr Llyich Tchaikovsky at the
Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall on Monday, December 9th. Fischer, who conducts the Utah Symphony made
an excellent debut with the orchestra, and Vähälä, in this return engagement,
again impressed everyone with her impeccable artistry – this time with a piece
that was probably brand new to everyone in the audience.
Magnus Lindberg is a Finnish composer might be confused with
Christian Lindberg the Swedish trombonist/composer/conductor. Besides having the same last name, both were
born in 1958 with Christian being four months older. We can at least rest
assured that neither composer will be mixed up with former Portland City
Commissioner Mike Lindberg.
Using a chamber ensemble of strings, two oboes, two bassoon,
and two horns, Lindberg’s Violin Concerto has an intimate atmosphere, but
demands the utmost intensity from all performers. Another unusual aspect of this work, written
in 2006, is that it is divided into three movements that are denoted with time
signatures rather than the titles like adagio and scherzo.
This concert marked Vähälä’s fourth appearance with the Oregon
Symphony. She performed Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons” in 2007 (reviewed
here) , Britten’s Violin Concerto in 2010 (reviewed
here), and Prokofiev’s Second Violin Concerto in 2011 (reviewed
here). With Lindberg’s Violin Concerto, Vähälä again brought great
intensity and technique. She executed numerous, very fast downward and upward
scales that were imbued with little glissando-like effects. The clear, crystalline
tones that she elicited from the upper register of her violin took the audience
into a soundscape that went back and forth from serene to agitated. Here and
there she would engage in a conversation with the orchestra, as if to inspire
or cajole them along the way.
Vähälä’s performance was supported by an orchestra that was
equally engaged. It seemed that at one point the bass violin section had to
play at the top of their registers, and the end of the piece did end in a
scherzo-like fashion with everyone on stage playing at hyper speed. The
audience became so caught up in the performance that you could have heard a pin
drop. Overall, Lindberg’s Violin Concerto is an impressive piece, and time will
tell if it enters the standard repertoire.
The concert opened with a scintillating performance of the
Symphonic Suite from Prokofiev’s opera “The Love for Three Oranges.” The orchestra, under the magic of Fischer’s
baton, created all sorts of sonic colors that changed from fanfare-like swirls to
delicate layers of sound followed by sudden bursts and rumbling that crashed
together – and that was just in the first selection, entitled “The Ridiculous
One.” You didn’t need to know the story
of the opera or the names of the movements to be entertained by this work. Snarling
trumpets and trombones, liquid smooth woodwinds, pummeling timpani, exciting
decrescendos and crescendos , wild accelerandos, and virtuosic ensemble playing
by the entire ensemble combined to make the Symphonic Suite mesmerizing.
For second half of the concert, the orchestra gave a stellar
performance of Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony. Even though each member of the
orchestra has probably played this piece a hundred times, Fischer seemed to
find a way to engage them and the piece sounded absolutely fresh. The tempos never dragged and the very
full-Russian chords didn’t have any heaviness. Even though Fischer never pointed
much at various sections or principals of the ensemble when it was their time
to shine, he still elicited incredible performances from everyone. Highlights
included the super smooth and sweet sound from principal bassoonist Evan
Kuhlmann, the pillowy soft touch that principal timpanist Jonathan Greeney applied,
principal clarinetist Yoshinori Nakao’s liquid and languid phrases, and the
sparkling piccolo of Zachariah Galatis.
There must have been something extra special going on
between the orchestra and Fischer, because concertmaster Sarah Kwak refused to
get up when Fischer came out for the second round of applause, allowing Fischer
to receive the applause all by himself. He, of course, continued and finally
succeeded in getting Kwak (and the orchestra) to stand, but this was a terrific
thing to see, and I have to admit that I’ve never seen it before at an Oregon
Symphony. I have only seen this one time, and that was when Gustavo Dudamel
conducted the Israeli Philharmonic in, yes, Tchaikovsky’s 4th at
Carnegie Hall in 2008 reviewed
here.) That puts Fischer in good company.
----
Postscript: In his introductory comments to the concert, principal percussionist Niel DePonte mentioned that there are 193 cymbal crashes (all in the 4th movement) of the Tchaikovsky. During the performance, I started to count them and got to 114 before DePonte began crashing them (little crashes) so fast that I could keep up. He has remarkable hand and wrist strength - much like a professional athlete.
----
Postscript: In his introductory comments to the concert, principal percussionist Niel DePonte mentioned that there are 193 cymbal crashes (all in the 4th movement) of the Tchaikovsky. During the performance, I started to count them and got to 114 before DePonte began crashing them (little crashes) so fast that I could keep up. He has remarkable hand and wrist strength - much like a professional athlete.
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Minnesota Orchestra makes Grammy cut
The Minnesota Orchestra was nominated to the best orchestral recording category for the 2014 Grammys.
Here are the nominees for all of the Classical categories:
Here are the nominees for all of the Classical categories:
73. Best Orchestral Performance
Atterberg: Orchestral Works Vol. 1
Neeme Järvi, conductor (Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra)
Label: Chandos
Lutosławski: Symphony No. 1
Esa-Pekka Salonen, conductor (Los Angeles Philharmonic)
Track from: Lutoslawski: The Symphonies
Label: Sony Classical
Schumann: Symphony No. 2; Overtures Manfred & Genoveva
Claudio Abbado, conductor (Orchestra Mozart)
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 4
Osmo Vänskä, conductor (Minnesota Orchestra)
Label: BIS Records
Stravinsky: Le Sacre Du Printemps
Simon Rattle, conductor (Berliner Philharmoniker)
Label: EMI Classics
74. Best Opera Recording
Adès: The Tempest
Thomas Adès, conductor; Simon
Keenlyside, Isabel Leonard, Audrey Luna & Alan Oke; Luisa Bricetti
& Victoria Warivonchick, producers (The Metropolitan Opera
Orchestra; The Metropolitan Opera Chorus)
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Britten: The Rape Of Lucretia
Oliver Knussen, conductor;
Ian Bostridge, Peter Coleman-Wright, Susan Gritton & Angelika
Kirchschlager; John Fraser, producer (Aldeburgh Festival Ensemble)
Label: Virgin Classics
Kleiberg: David & Bathsheba
Tõnu Kaljuste, conductor;
Anna Einarsson & Johannes Weisser; Morten Lindberg, producer
(Trondheim Symphony Orchestra; Trondheim Symphony Orchestra Vocal
Ensemble)
Label: 2L (Lindberg Lyd)
Vinci: Artaserse
Diego Fasolis, conductor;
Valer Barna-Sabadus, Daniel Behle, Max Emanuel Cencic, Franco Fagioli
& Philippe Jaroussky; Ulrich Ruscher, producer (Concerto Köln; Coro
Della Radiotelevisione Svizzera, Lugano)
Label: Virgin Classics
Wagner: Der Ring Des Nibelungen
Christian Thielemann,
conductor; Katarina Dalayman, Albert Dohmen, Stephen Gould, Eric
Halfvarson & Linda Watson; Othmar Eichinger, producer (Orchester Der
Wiener Staatsoper; Chor Der Wiener Staatsoper)
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
75. Best Choral Performance
Berlioz: Grande Messe Des Morts
Colin Davis, conductor (Barry Banks; London Symphony Orchestra; London Philharmonic Choir & London Symphony Chorus)
Label: LSO Live
Palestrina: Volume 3
Harry Christophers, conductor (The Sixteen)
Label: Coro
Parry: Works For Chorus & Orchestra
Neeme Järvi, conductor;
Adrian Partington, chorus master (Amanda Roocroft; BBC National
Orchestra Of Wales; BBC National Chorus Of Wales)
Label: Chandos
Pärt: Adam's Lament
Tõnu Kaljuste, conductor (Tui
Hirv & Rainer Vilu; Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir;
Sinfonietta Riga & Tallinn Chamber Orchestra; Latvian Radio Choir
& Vox Clamantis)
Label: ECM New Series
Whitbourn: Annelies
James Jordan, conductor (Ariana Zukerman; The Lincoln Trio; Westminster Williamson Voices)
Label: Naxos
76. Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance
Beethoven: Violin Sonatas
Leonidas Kavakos & Enrico Pace
Label: Decca
Cage: The 10,000 Things
Vicki Ray, William Winant, Aron Kallay & Tom Peters
Label: MicroFest Records
Duo
Hélène Grimaud & Sol Gabetta
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Roomful Of Teeth
Brad Wells & Roomful Of Teeth
Label: New Amsterdam Records
Times Go By Turns
New York Polyphony
Label: BIS Records
77. Best Classical Instrumental Solo
Bartók, Eötvös & Ligeti
Patricia Kopatchinskaja; Peter Eötvös, conductor (Ensemble Modern & Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra)
Label: Naïve
Corigliano: Conjurer - Concerto For Percussionist & String Orchestra
Evelyn Glennie; David Alan Miller, conductor (Albany Symphony)
Track from: Corigliano: Conjurer; Vocalise
Label: Naxos
The Edge Of Light
The Edge Of Light
Gloria Cheng (Calder Quartet)
Label: Harmonia Mundi
Lindberg: Piano Concerto No. 2
Yefim Bronfman; Alan Gilbert, conductor (New York Philharmonic)
Track from: Magnus Lindberg
Label: Dacapo Records
Salonen: Violin Concerto; Nyx
Leila Josefowicz; Esa-Pekka Salonen, conductor (Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra)
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Schubert: Piano Sonatas D. 845 & D. 960
Maria João Pires
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
78. Best Classical Vocal Solo
Drama Queens
Joyce DiDonato (Alan Curtis; Il Complesso Barocco)
Label: Virgin Classics
Mission
Cecilia Bartoli (Diego Fasolis; Philippe Jaroussky; I Barocchisti)
Label: Decca
Schubert: Winterreise
Christoph Prégardien (Michael Gees)
Label: Challenge
Wagner
Jonas Kaufmann (Donald Runnicles; Markus Brück; Chor Der Deutschen Oper Berlin; Orchester Der Deutschen Oper Berlin)
Label: Decca
Winter Morning Walks
Dawn Upshaw (Maria Schneider;
Jay Anderson, Frank Kimbrough & Scott Robinson; Australian Chamber
Orchestra & St. Paul Chamber Orchestra)
Label: ArtistShare
79. Best Classical Compendium
Hindemith: Violinkonzert; Symphonic Metamorphosis; Konzertmusik
Christoph Eschenbach, conductor
Label: Ondine
Holmboe: Concertos
Dima Slobodeniouk, conductor; Preben Iwan, producer
Label: Dacapo Records
Tabakova: String Paths
Maxim Rysanov; Manfred Eicher, producer
Label: ECM New Series
80. Best Contemporary Classical Composition
Lindberg, Magnus: Piano Concerto No. 2
Magnus Lindberg, composer (Yefim Bronfman, Alan Gilbert & New York Philharmonic)
Track from: Magnus Lindberg
Label: Dacapo Records
Pärt, Arvo: Adam's Lament
Arvo Pärt, composer (Tõnu Kaljuste, Latvian Radio Choir, Vox Clamantis & Sinfonietta Riga)
Track from: Arvo Pärt: Adam's Lament
Label: ECM New Series
Salonen, Esa-Pekka: Violin Concerto
Esa-Pekka Salonen, composer (Leila Josefowicz, Esa-Pekka Salonen & Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra)
Track from: Out Of Nowhere
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Schneider, Maria: Winter Morning Walks
Maria Schneider, composer (Dawn Upshaw, Jay Anderson, Frank Kimbrough, Scott Robinson & Australian Chamber Orchestra)
Track from: Winter Morning Walks
Label: ArtistShare
Shaw, Caroline: Partita For 8 Voices
Caroline Shaw, composer (Brad Wells & Roomful Of Teeth)
Track from: Roomful Of Teeth
Label: New Amsterdam Records
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