Ingram Marshall's Hymnodic Delays is something I picked up after reading a mention of his work in the New York Times. I've struggled to find ways to describe this recording, partly because Mr. Marshall's work is unjustly obscure and partly because this recording is a diverse sampler of his work. Three pieces are represented on this recording, a work for orchestra and tape, a suite for four unaccompanied voices, and a string quartet/tape piece.
All three works are fairly slow-moving, more of a feeling of meditation than, say, dancing. "Hymnodic Delays", the vocal work, has a bit of movement in comparison with the others--the harmonies are dry and acrid here, emphasized by the spare arrangement of the voices in space and the performance by early-music specialists, Paul Hillier's Theatre of Voices, emphasize that by using early-music styles. The string quartet, "Fog Tropes II", seems like one of those ideas that are really obvious, once you hear it. It's an integration of shimmering, mournful sounds by the quartet (the Kronos Quartet here, as good as they've ever sounded) and recorded drones of real fog horns. It's gorgeous and moving.
Yet "Fog Tropes II" isn't the best work on the disk. That would be "Kingdom Come", performed ably by the American Composers Orchestra and Paul Dunkel. It opens with beautiful string writing, seemingly shadowed by ominous, hollow, recorded sounds that surge and recede, sometimes sounding like distant tympani, and eventually coming forward as voices: a muezzin's call to prayer here, a church choir there. As the taped sounds mutate, so does the orchestra, with angered surges of brass and filigrees of woodwinds. The piece has a deeply sorrowful tone (it was written upon the death of Mr. Marshall's brother) that highlights the anguish while tempering the joyful beauty. This is a masterpiece.
10 out of 10
CDs listened to today:
- François-Bernard Mache: Andromède
- Prince: Graffiti Bridge
- Bill Watrous: Manhattan Wildlife Refuge
- Nikolai Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 1
- Smithereens: 11
- Juraj Filas: Sonata For Trombone And Piano (At the end of the century)