Ross Harris (b.1945) www.rossharris.co.nz is one of New
Zealand’s leading composers and has written more than two hundred compositions
including opera, symphonic music, chamber music, klezmer and electronic music.
He has been a finalist in the prestigious SOUNZ Contemporary Award more times
than any other New Zealand composer and has won the award four times. He was
born in Amberley, New Zealand, studied in Christchurch and Wellington and
taught at the Victoria University of Wellington Music Department for over
thirty years.
In 2004 he took early retirement from teaching and began
working as a freelance composer. His residency with the Auckland Philharmonia
(2005–2006) led to the composition of three symphonies. Harris received a
Queen's Service Medal in 1985 for his opera Waituhi,
the Composers Association of New Zealand (CANZ) Citation for Services to New
Zealand Music in 1990 and the CANZ Trust Fund Award in 2016.. His major works
include six string quartets, six symphonies, a violin concerto premiered by
Anthony Marwood in 2010 and a cello concerto premiered by Li-Wei Qin in 2012.
Naxos have already recorded Harris’ Symphonies No’s 2 and 3
(8.572574) and his Symphony No. 4 coupled with the Cello Concerto (8.573044).
Now from Naxos www.naxos.com comes Harris’ Symphony No. 5 and Violin Concerto in World Premiere
recordings from the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra http://apo.co.nz conducted by Eckehard Stier www.eckehardstier.com and
Garry Walker www.garrywalker.net with
violinist Ilya Gringolts http://ilyagringolts.com and mezzo-soprano Sally-Anne Russell www.artsmanagement.com.au/main/?c=sb-plugin-gocontacts&sb-plugin-gocontacts_task=view_item_details&id=29981
8.573532 |
Ross Harris’ Violin
Concerto No. 1 (2010) was commissioned by Christopher Marshall for
violinist Anthony Marwood and premiered by him with the New Zealand Symphony
Orchestra under Tecwyn Evans in 2010. In five parts, the solo violin opens Part 1 high in the register soon joined
by a melancholic clarinet. An oboe is heard, then a bassoon as the soloist
continues his playful working over of the material. The music slowly gains in flow as the
orchestra joins, finding some beautiful moments with some wonderful textures
and harmonies before leading into Part 2
where the tempo increases and becomes more dramatic with some very fine
incisive playing from Ilya Gringolts. The music has more relaxed moments for
the orchestra with the soloist finding little moments of quixotic playfulness.
The orchestra provides a terrific response to the soloist who works up much
passion and fury before slowing in a quite lovely passage to lead into the next
Part 3.
Here Gringolts achieves some fine textures along with the
APO strings in this slow haunting section where both soloist and orchestra find
much deep feeling, shaping the music beautifully and finding some exquisite
layers of sound all the while hovering on the edge of atonality. In Part 4 the soloist and orchestra develop
the music through moments that reflect the opening movement of the concerto, finding
sudden changing moods, rhythms and tempi before working up a fast and dynamic
passage pointed up by timpani. A myriad of woodwind appear in the wonderful orchestration
with the music growing ever faster and dramatic before reaching a climax and
going into Part 5 where the music
finds more of a poise in the orchestra to which the soloist brings a slow
exquisitely shaped line. A cadenza is reached where the soloist slowly and
exquisitely works over the theme, finding some lovely harmonies and textures before
finding a hush at the end.
This is a spectacularly fine work that deserves a place in
the repertoire. It is played to perfection by Gringolts and the Auckland
Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Garry Walker.
Harris’ Symphony No.
5 (2013) is in seven movements and
sets three poems by Hungarian born poet Panni Palasti within four purely
orchestral movements. Adagio I has a
slow thoughtful opening for a solo bassoon over a hushed orchestra to which
other woodwind slowly join, weaving a melancholy, quite lovely theme. Again
Harris’ expert orchestration is in evidence. One can’t help but feel poised on
the edge of beauty and deep sorrow as the movement progresses, slowly
developing through the most wonderful passages. Eventually the strings bring a
greater intensity only to fall back to a deep sadness out of which the woodwind
emerge bringing little moments of animation. Yet it is the brooding, intensely
tragic air that prevails. A trumpet rises out of the orchestra to herald a
series of sudden outbursts from the orchestra before finding a hush at the end.
The second movement, The
line-up takes the text of Palasti’s poem that opens with the words ‘when
the men come/to search us/to herd us/who will hide me.’ A harp is soon joined
by mezzo soprano Sally-Anne Russell, the orchestra joining to add a string
layer with Russell finding a brilliance over a more intense string layer.
It is the woodwind that again that bring an air of jollity,
perhaps a mock jollity to Scherzo I
but they are soon overridden by brass and drums in a frenzied theme. The music
rises in drama through some impressive moments before a solo violin appears to
bring a fast forward driving section. The music slows momentarily but the
rhythmic driving music thunders forward to the sudden end.
Harp and strings gently open Candlelight to which Russell brings a lovely tone that blends
beautifully as she sings ‘we sit in the dark/only the centre of the shelter is
lit by a single candle’ supported by the most exquisite orchestral
accompaniment. There are moments where just the harp and soloist bring a spare,
haunting quality.
There is a rather fragmented passage from all sections of
the orchestra as Scherzo II sparks
and flickers forward. Soon a solo violin finds a dialogue with a variety of
instruments before the music moves through moments of greater drama, finding a
terrific mixture of emotions as the music quickly veers from slower to faster,
from flowing to staccato, hurtling from one expressive idea to another.
The solo harp opens Lessons
learned from my father gently joined by Sally-Anne Russell as she sings ‘I
have to run/on the double/to warn him to hide/climb out of the window/before
the soldiers arrive’ finding a real depth of emotion in this initially spare
setting of the most striking and vivid of poems. Woodwind subtly join, a
clarinet gains prominence before the orchestra joins to lead into the final
movement.
Woodwind rise over the orchestra to bring a lovely texture
to the affecting theme of Adagio II. Brass
and woodwind weave some spellbinding passages with glimpses of atonality
emerging in the strings. Woodwind continue to weave a rippling texture with suggestions
of the unsettled second scherzo appearing. The music rises to a climax only to quieten
as harp and woodwind, then brass weave forward. The music further quietens and
slows in the strings to find a peaceful, hushed coda.
This is an impressive symphony full of depth and feeling
that is given a terrific performance here by Eckehard Stier and the Auckland Philharmonia
Orchestra.
Ross Harris is an impressive composer of substance and deep
feeling. The recordings made in Auckland Town Hall, New Zealand are first rate and
there are useful booklet notes with full English texts.
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