Andriessen reviews

Louis Andriessen: The only one

Nora Fischer (soprano); Los Angeles Philharmonic/Esa-Pekka Salonen (Nonesuch)
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I Still Play

Jeremy Denk, Timo Andres, et al (piano) (Nonesuch)
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Andriessen's Theatre of the World conducted by Reinbert de Leeuw

Louis Andriessen has never been one to waste his prodigious intellectual resources on ephemera or the incidental. Since bursting onto the world stage in the 1970s with an ebulliently aggressive, Marx- and bebop-inspired minimalism, his palette has further expanded to embrace a cornucopia of styles; often within the same piece, but seamlessly integrated and focused like a laser on profound questions of humanity. 

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Andriessen: Anaïs nin; De Staat

That tough-minded minimalist Louis Andriessen here ventures into more personal territory, taking on the agonised memoirs of Spanish writer Anaïs Nin. These reveal her torrid affairs with four men: Antoine Artaud, Henry Miller, René Allendy and her father, the Spanish composer Joaquín Nin, with whom she had an incestuous relationship.

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The Art of Han de Vries: Oboe Concertos

Oboe Classics is a new British-based label designed, like Clarinet Classics and Cello Classics before it, to focus on a single instrument, its repertoire and its performers. It has made a bright start with a well-varied first batch of releases, attractively presented with a clear design identity, and with generally helpful notes supplemented by further material accessible via its website (www.oboeclassics.com). Most of this is the work of the label’s founder Jeremy Polmear, who (like his clarinet and cello counterparts) is also no slouch as a performer.

 

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Andriessen: Writing to Vermeer

As first staged in Amsterdam by Netherlands Opera in 1999, Louis Andriessen and Peter Greenaway’s third collaboration was a dazzling fusion of music and visual imagery. As much a virtuoso display of theatrical technology and film techniques as a triumph of musical and dramatic vision, Writing to Vermeer was an obvious candidate for release as a DVD. But it appears now as an audio recording, made in the studio when the original production was revived in 2004; though one misses the impact of the visuals, the musical power and subtlety of Andriessen’s score are vividly communicated.
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