Saariaho reviews

Saariaho: Tocar; Cloud Trio; Light and Matter; Aure; Graal théâtre

Jennifer Koh, Hsin-Yun Huang, Wilhelmina Smith, Anssi Karttunen, Nicolas Hodges; Curtis 20/21 Ensemble/Conner Gray Covington (Cédille)
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Only The Sound Remains by Kaija Saariaho

Kaija Saariaho’s Only the Sound Remains takes flight from an intriguing premise and a stellar artistic team. The opera draws on two Noh plays, as translated by Ezra Pound and Ernest Fenollosa, while Saariaho is renowned for her scores’ complex and sumptuous sonorities.
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A worthy tribute to the longstanding genius of Kaija Saariaho

‘The Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra are on fine form as they embrace Kaija Saariaho’s unique soundscape in this collection of works spanning the last 25 years’
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Saariaho's Chamber Works for Strings Volume 2

The second volume of Meta4’s championing of Kaija Saariaho’s chamber works for strings presents, fascinatingly, a fine gossamer web of transformation and re-invention. Only Terra Memoria, Saariaho’s second string quartet, dating from 2006, stands alone in its original single form – and it’s not only the most substantial (nearly 20 minutes) work on the disc, but also the most robustly inventive.

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Camilla Hoitenga performs Saariaho's flute chamber works

'This music celebrates, above all, the fertility of collaboration – between the arts, and between composer and performer.'
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Saariaho

As an admirer of Kaija Saariaho, I’d been saddened to be disappointed by her monodrama Emilie, at its staged premiere in Lyon in 2010. Here, the distillation of the work into a 25-minute concert suite, for ears alone, makes for a new and excitingly close focus both on the thoughts and feelings of its protagonist, the Marquise Emilie de Chatelet, scientist and mistress of Voltaire – and on the music’s unique and distinctive landscape, its coppery-harpsichord-tinted writing – now more economically written for small orchestra.

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Saariaho: La Passion de Simone

 

The famous and creatively fertile trio of the Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho, librettist and poet Amin Maalouf, and the soprano Dawn Upshaw appears once again in this live recording from Saariaho’s 60th birthday concert at Helsinki’s new Music Centre in 2012. This is the composer’s oratorio, La Passion de Simone, a ‘musical path in 15 stations’ offering comments on, and quotations from, the life and works of the French-Jewish philosopher, pacifist and ascetic, Simone Weil, who died at the age of 34.

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Preludes: Messiaen • Saariaho

 

Messiaen and Saariaho may overlap little in terms of specific technique, but there is a clear artistic affinity in their music. In the words of Peter Sellars’s eloquent booklet essay, they share a ‘taste for the invisible and yearning for the transcendent’, making their pairing on this beautiful disc from pianist Gloria Cheng exceptionally rewarding.

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Saariaho: L’amour de loin

A medieval tale of idealised love, beyond normal comprehension, and fulfilled only at the moment of death; not Wagner or Debussy, but Saariaho’s mesmerising first opera L’amour de loin.

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Saariaho: Notes on Light; Orion; Mirage

Saariaho has always had an extraordinary ear for a beauty of sound, best described in terms of light. Since working with singers like Dawn Upshaw and Karita Mattila, her melodic contours have become less angular, more lyrical. The slow unfolding of the solo line in the first movement of Notes on Light – a five-movement cello concerto – has the simple inevitability you’d expect from that movement’s subtitle: ‘Translucent, secret’. Anssi Karttunen is as impressive in this as he is in the strongly rhythmic music which the work also contains.

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Listening to Yourself: works by Couperin, Rameau, Busoni, Saariaho, Chopin, AlbŽniz, Rachmaninov, Ravel and J Strauss

Third of the unconventional pianists filmed around and during recitals at the enterprising Ruhr Piano Festival, Pöntinen is more reticent than Berezovsky and Hamelin (reviewed last month),but an admirable and reflective artist all the same. His programme here is equally adventurous. Elegant pieces by Couperin and Rameau are followed by revelatory Busoni, including the daunting Toccata delivered with characteristic sharpness, and Saariaho – a little too fond of trills and glissandos, perhaps lost without her usual orchestral finesse.
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Saariaho, Cage, Maderna

It’s extraordinary to think that Nymphéa is now almost 20 years old: Saariaho’s combination of instruments with live electronics comes up as fresh as ever, and with more sensuous beauty here than the rather gritty, in-your-face version by the Kronos Quartet. It’s partly the more resonant recording, which doesn’t separate the instruments so much in the stereo picture, but it’s also the vibrant quality of the playing from Norway’s premiere new music quartet – never ugly, even when asked to make extreme demands on the instruments, and always impeccably coloured, balanced and timed.
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Saariaho: Verblendungen; Lichtbogen; Io; Stilleben

Together with her contemporary Magnus Lindberg, Kaija Saariaho has given new Finnish writing a truly distinctive place on the contemporary music map: this disc presents four works which are now classics of their genre. Verblendungen, for tape and 35-piece orchestra, was Saariaho’s first professional work, and the broad, sweeping ‘brushstrokes’ which inspired it make an arresting and confident announcement of her presence.
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Saariaho: Verblendungen; Jardin secret I; Laconisme de l'aile; ... sah den Vögeln; NoaNoa

In a career that has included studies with Paavo Heininen in Helsinki, Brian Ferneyhough in Freiburg and work at the IRCAM studios, Kaija Saariaho’s muse ranges widely. Verblendungen, an evocation for tape and orchestra of the ‘process of being blinded or dazzled’ – expertly played by the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra – indicates the predominant nature of the composer’s style: slow background movement with more rapid activity fragmenting the surface. Much of her work relies on these broad gestures, perhaps a result of the Sibelian legacy, or indeed the forested expanses of Finland itself.
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Saariaho: Graal Théâtre; Château de l'âme; Amers

These are three major works by Kaija Saariaho, which straddle the point in the mid-Nineties when her music radically changed direction. Where the pieces of the previous 15 years that had established her reputation were vertically conceived, relying heavily on the manipulation of texture and colour and frequently using electronic transformations, around 1994 she began working with linear, melodic ideas and more regular rhythmic patterns, though the fastidious imagination for sonority remained as acute as ever.
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Saariaho: Six Japanese Gardens; Lonh; NoaNoa; Près

Kaija Saariaho winningly confirms her distinguished originality as a composer with these pieces for soloists and electronics. In each case, her exploration of the solo instrument’s expressive potential and the enrichments provided by the electronics create a powerful and dramatic soundscape. The interactive CD-ROM is an added bonus.
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Saariaho: New Gates; Cendres; Grammaire des rêves; Solar

These ensemble pieces show how the virtues of Kaija Saariaho’s orchestral works, their fastidious use of instrumental colour and lucid harmonic schemes, are tellingly carried over into much sparser sound worlds. Even the one vocal work, Grammaire des rêves (also just issued on Ondine, reviewed last month), is not out of place, for this setting of fragments of Paul Eluard’s poetry effectively treats the soprano and contralto soloists instrumentally, persistently embedding them in the shifting, luminous textures.
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Saariaho: From the Grammar of Dreams; Farewell

Kaija Saariaho’s reputation as one of the most distinctive European composers of her generation is founded upon her instrumental and orchestral works, often using electronics, in which her fastidious ear for sonority and sure-footed harmonic organisation have been magically employed. But she has consistently written vocal music too – her first opera, L’amour de loin, was premiered at the Salzburg Festival last summer, and as this beguiling collection demonstrates she is marvellously responsive to the weight and meaning of texts.
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Saariaho: Graal théâtre; Solar; Lichtbogen

The ordering of the works on this disc makes sense: the violin concerto Graal théâtre (recorded here in the revised version with chamber ensemble) is both the most impressive and the most approachable of the three pieces. If you’re new to the music of this strikingly distinctive Finnish composer, that’s the right place to start. But beginning at the end and working backwards is instructive too – in fact it’s rather like witnessing a personality developing on fast-forward.
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Saariaho: L'aile du songe; Laconisme de l'aile; Poems by Saint-John Perse

For listeners who normally find the Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho too acerbic – for all her imaginative skill and power – the two flute works recorded here may be pleasantly surprising. Nearly 20 years separates the early Laconisme de l’aile from the flute concerto L’aile du songe, and yet in spirit they have a lot in common. The discovery of France (the country and its culture as much as its music) has had a wonderfully liberating, enriching effect on Saariaho’s sound-world, an effect which Laconisme de l’aile (inspired by the poetry of Saint-John Perse) often seems to reach towards.
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