Messiaen: Quartet for the End of Time - Rohde: one wing / Left Coast Chamber Ensemble
The provocative and beguiling Left Coast Chamber Ensemble (LCCE) comprises the crĆØme de la crĆØme of the San Francisco Bay Areaās musicians. Their motto: nothing is out of bounds, and anything is possible. Presenters of all types of music including small ensemble, vocal, orchestral, multi-media and operatic, a select group comes together for this recording of Olivier Messiaenās seminal chamber work, Quartet for the End of Time. Written during the composerās confinement in World War II, he maintained hope, expressing, āThe abyss is Time with its sadness, its weariness. The birds are the opposite ⦠our desire for light, for stars, for rainbows, and for jubilant songs.ā LCCE co-founder and prize-winning composer Kurt Rohde echoes this sentiment in his Messiaen-inspired one wing for violin and piano, heard here in its world-premiere recording.
REVIEW:
Iāve gone from having two or three recordings of this eerie but emotionally powerful work, one of them being Tashiās, to just having one, and that is the EMI recording made under the composerās own supervision and featuring his wife, Yvonne Loriod, as the pianist. (Interestingly, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskauās son Manuel is the cellist in this performance.) But after listening to the Left Coast Ensembleās new recording, Iām tempted to add it to my collection.
Their performance is a bit brisker and tauter than either Tashiās or Messiaenās but not lacking in emotional intensity. Although I felt that the Left Coast Ensembleās more linear approach gave a more āstreamlinedā profile to the music, this is sometimes to its favor as it brings out the structure of the work better. And as I say, the individual members of this quartet clearly get the musicās message. Indeed, I found clarinetist Jerome Simasā long solo in the third section (āThe Abyss of the Birdsā) to be as forlorn as that of Wolfgang Meyer on the Messiaen-Loriod recording, and better than that of Stoltzman with Tashi.
ā Art Music Lounge
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Messiaen: Quartet for the End of Time - Rohde: one wing / Left Coast Chamber Ensemble
Messiaen: Quartet for the End of Time - Rohde: one wing / Left Coast Chamber Ensemble
The provocative and beguiling Left Coast Chamber Ensemble (LCCE) comprises the crĆØme de la crĆØme of the San Francisco Bay Areaās musicians. Their motto: nothing is out of bounds, and anything is possible. Presenters of all types of music including small ensemble, vocal, orchestral, multi-media and operatic, a select group comes together for this recording of Olivier Messiaenās seminal chamber work, Quartet for the End of Time. Written during the composerās confinement in World War II, he maintained hope, expressing, āThe abyss is Time with its sadness, its weariness. The birds are the opposite ⦠our desire for light, for stars, for rainbows, and for jubilant songs.ā LCCE co-founder and prize-winning composer Kurt Rohde echoes this sentiment in his Messiaen-inspired one wing for violin and piano, heard here in its world-premiere recording.
REVIEW:
Iāve gone from having two or three recordings of this eerie but emotionally powerful work, one of them being Tashiās, to just having one, and that is the EMI recording made under the composerās own supervision and featuring his wife, Yvonne Loriod, as the pianist. (Interestingly, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskauās son Manuel is the cellist in this performance.) But after listening to the Left Coast Ensembleās new recording, Iām tempted to add it to my collection.
Their performance is a bit brisker and tauter than either Tashiās or Messiaenās but not lacking in emotional intensity. Although I felt that the Left Coast Ensembleās more linear approach gave a more āstreamlinedā profile to the music, this is sometimes to its favor as it brings out the structure of the work better. And as I say, the individual members of this quartet clearly get the musicās message. Indeed, I found clarinetist Jerome Simasā long solo in the third section (āThe Abyss of the Birdsā) to be as forlorn as that of Wolfgang Meyer on the Messiaen-Loriod recording, and better than that of Stoltzman with Tashi.
ā Art Music Lounge
Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
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Description
The provocative and beguiling Left Coast Chamber Ensemble (LCCE) comprises the crĆØme de la crĆØme of the San Francisco Bay Areaās musicians. Their motto: nothing is out of bounds, and anything is possible. Presenters of all types of music including small ensemble, vocal, orchestral, multi-media and operatic, a select group comes together for this recording of Olivier Messiaenās seminal chamber work, Quartet for the End of Time. Written during the composerās confinement in World War II, he maintained hope, expressing, āThe abyss is Time with its sadness, its weariness. The birds are the opposite ⦠our desire for light, for stars, for rainbows, and for jubilant songs.ā LCCE co-founder and prize-winning composer Kurt Rohde echoes this sentiment in his Messiaen-inspired one wing for violin and piano, heard here in its world-premiere recording.
REVIEW:
Iāve gone from having two or three recordings of this eerie but emotionally powerful work, one of them being Tashiās, to just having one, and that is the EMI recording made under the composerās own supervision and featuring his wife, Yvonne Loriod, as the pianist. (Interestingly, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskauās son Manuel is the cellist in this performance.) But after listening to the Left Coast Ensembleās new recording, Iām tempted to add it to my collection.
Their performance is a bit brisker and tauter than either Tashiās or Messiaenās but not lacking in emotional intensity. Although I felt that the Left Coast Ensembleās more linear approach gave a more āstreamlinedā profile to the music, this is sometimes to its favor as it brings out the structure of the work better. And as I say, the individual members of this quartet clearly get the musicās message. Indeed, I found clarinetist Jerome Simasā long solo in the third section (āThe Abyss of the Birdsā) to be as forlorn as that of Wolfgang Meyer on the Messiaen-Loriod recording, and better than that of Stoltzman with Tashi.
ā Art Music Lounge