Loading...

Michael Hersch: Carrion-Miles to Purgatory

  • Label New Focus Recordings (FCR-229)
  • Release Date May 31, 2019
  • Patricia Kopatchinskaja, violin
    Miranda Cuckson, violin
    Jay Campbell, cello
    Michael Hersch, piano

This collection of recent duos by composer Michael Hersch gives the listener a chance to hear the intense expressive contrasts so characteristic of his music in a profoundly intimate context. From jarring, closely spaced intervals, to delicate, ethereal harmonics, to bracingly virtuosic passagework, Hersch’s voice projects strongly throughout this recording featuring three of his most frequent performer collaborators: Patricia Kopatchinskaja, Miranda Cuckson, and Jay Campbell, as well as the composer himself on the piano.

Kopatchinskaja commissioned Hersch specifically to write a work combining vocal and instrumental performance, and the result is a harrowing piece which marries storytelling to song. The speaking part in ...das Rückgrat berstend is precisely notated with extensive expression markings, delineating specific dynamics, durations, and character indications that engage in a form of word painting with spoken narrative form. The source text is by Christopher Middleton, and at Kopatchinskaja’s request it was translated into German. The voice mostly is heard on its own while the strings answer and color the text in responsive fashion. Hersch’s meticulous notation of the vocal part ensures that it fulfills a dual role, both as the raconteur of Middleton’s angst ridden poetry but also as a third “instrument” in the composition. As with much of Hersch’s music, the moments of repose in the work are not entirely restful -- a hollow unease lingers in the disembodied intervals.

Hersch joined violinist Miranda Cuckson for a duo performance at the Brooklyn venue National Sawdust in the fall of 2018. Drawing from his work for violin and piano (the wreckage of flowers), solo violin (the weather and landscape are on our side, Fourteen Pieces, Five Fragments), and solo piano (The Vanishing Pavilions), Hersch created a new evening-length piece - an excerpt from which appears on this recording - which further underscores the violent and meticulous nature of both the music and the performance of it. Athletic, urgent material contrasts with static, meditative sustained tones and vertical pillars of resonating sonorities in a cohesive work that deftly weaves together disparate compositions into a new work, and captures a palpable balance of focus and freedom from the moment of performance itself.

Each of the thirteen movements in Carrion-Miles to Purgatory is paired with a fragment from Robert Lowell’s poetry collection, Lord Weary’s Castle. The connections between Lowell’s poems and Hersch’s music are largely subconscious, but the poetry provided Hersch solace during the piece’s composition - a time during which he was grappling with the recent death of a close friend. In calling for the spare use of vibrato throughout, Hersch indicates his interest in a sound world of maximum vulnerability, as demonstrated in the precarious unstable chords of the opening movements. Movement III is a distorted dirge, as discordant chords rock back and forth between the two instruments, and the monolithic quality of the rhythmic gestures in the preceding movements begins to loosen up in movement IV. Movement V recalls material from previous movements and prefaces material to be heard throughout the remainder of the piece. It stands in the middle of the composition like a summation and a foreshadowing, and immediately engages the listener in a meta-dialogue with the structure of the piece while one is listening to it. Movement VI is marked by luminous sustained dyads in the violin, out of which the cello emerges with unsettling ponticello utterances. Movement VII, “Ferociously,” returns to the visceral, towering sonorities from Movement III, and reasserts Hersch’s pattern of dichotomy between inward and strikingly outward music (underscored even further by the poignant, lilting melody in Movement VIII). Continuing along this pattern of contrasting energies, with newly inventive material in each subsequent movement, Hersch arrives at the last and longest movement of the work, an extended meditation on the material contained in the preceding movements. The work closes quietly, as we hear hymn-like material through a haze of resignation. Carrion-Miles to Purgatory marries the large scale structural gesture with the miniature character piece, and does so within the drastic frame of Hersch’s expressive world, highlighting his capacity to write gripping material in this most inward looking of contexts, the instrumental duo. – D. Lippel

Project Schott New York explores Hersch's latest recording featuring performances by Patricia Kopatchinskaja, Miranda Cuckson, Jay Campbell and the composer

"The music of Michael Hersch is direct, powerful, and expressive: it makes the pulsing nerve of the human condition audible, laying bare some of the most intense and powerful human emotions. Hersch's new album, Carrion-Miles to Pugatory, released May 31st on New Focus Recordings, documents three works—each composed for two musicians—that address what frequent collaborator Patricia Kopatchinskaja calls "this dark side, this shadow and blood." Project Schott New York Full Article

Reviews

AnEarful — Best of 2019: Classical

"On this collection of three duos, Hersch is as unafraid as ever to look in the face of darkness. The first piece, ...das Rückgrat berstend, has violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja and cellist Jay Campbell emerge from silence, intertwined like a vine on a leafless branch. Then Kopatchinskaja intones a text by Christopher Middleton, translated into German, and a sense of ceremony takes over. The blandly titled Music for Violin and Piano is an excerpt from an evening length medley of earlier works played at National Sawdust by violinist Miranda Cuckson with Hersch himself on piano. The section we get here is a highly dynamic, seamless piece that works entirely well on its own. Cuckson and Campbell join forces for the title work, an alternately anguished and solemn 13 movements based on poems from Robert Lowell's Lord Weary's Castle. It's not until the last, and longest, movement, that we feel some compassion start to creep in. Hersch is not an easy listen, but I am always fulfilled - and even cleansed - by time spent in his sound-world."
— Jeremy Shatan, AnEarful

"Sometimes horizontal and ambient, other times disquietingly stark, it contrasts long, airy, doppler-like phrases and acidic close harmonies punctuated by Hersch’s signature short, sharp, sometimes shrieking accents ...The album’s title suite comprises fifteen pieces for violin and cello, inspired by texts by Robert Lowell – madness, torment and death are recurrent themes in Hersch’s work. Austere clouds of harmony slowly shift through the sonic picture. Minute timbral changes alternate between airiness and grit, often drifting into richly unsettled microtonal territory ... It’s music to get completely lost in, yet Hersch always finds a way to jar the themes out of any kind of resolution ... Of all the composers working in new music today, Hersch is as individualistic as anyone and may well be the very best."
— Lucid Culture

"works whose intensity and expressive contrasts are inevitably gripping"
— Norbert Tischer, Pizzicato

"... ever inventive and flowing with poignancy."— Gapplegate Classical-Modern Music Review

"Michael Hersch remains one of the most powerful voices of our time ... Whether it be in the implied processional of the third movement or the resignation of the eighth, the explorations of the ninth or the emotionally shattered stasis of the fifth, Hersch’s voice is consistently compelling. The sheer demands on the players in terms of stamina of concentration are enormous, not to mention the sheer physical control required. That this performance indeed succeeds in taking the listener into an “other” space is a testament to its success. Michael Hersch’s music continues to impress like that of few other contemporary composers. The recording is impeccable, as are production values of all aspects of this release. Hersch’s music demands much of the listener; but it gives back even more in return."— Colin Clarke, Fanfare