2013 Records To Die For Page 5


ROBERT LEVINE


Handel: Messiah (1751 version)
David Blackadder, Robert Brooks, Otta Jones, Henry Jenkinson, boy singers; Iestyn Davies, countertenor; Toby Spence, tenor; Eamonn Dougan, bass; Choir of New College Oxford, Academy of Ancient Music, Edward Higginbottom
Naxos 8.570131-32 (2 CDs). 2006. Adrian Hunter, prod.; Jonathan Stokes, eng. DDD. TT: 2:22:19

As Messiah-heads will tell you, there are many different versions of the work; Handel kept revising it for various occasions. This recording offers a rarity—a re-creation of performances in London in 1751 using all boys and men, even for the arias. The New College Oxford Choir is a blessing for the lack of hootiness of its trebles; there is a warmth of tone and delivery that delights, and the solo boys are remarkable. Countertenor Iestyn Davies has a gentle way with the alto arias; tenor Toby Spence is fearless and long of breath; bass Eamonn Dougan has a wonderful cello-like timbre. Higginbottom allows some discreet embellishments to the vocal line, and his tempos are natural—he isn't out to catch a train, nor does he ever lag. A terrific show that Handel would have recognized and loved. (XXX-1)

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Marie-Nicole Lemieux: Opera Arias: Gluck, Haydn, Mozart
Marie-Nicole Lemieux, contralto; Les Violons du Roy, Bernard Labadie
Naïve V2564 (CD). 2012. Jean-Pierre Loisil, prod.; Pierre-Antoine Signoret, eng. DDD. TT: 69:50

Mostly unusual repertoire sung by a most unusual voice—a true contralto. French-Canadian Lemieux is not a belter and not a show-off; her dark-chocolate timbre, however, can be seductive, tender, yearning, and furious by turns. In addition to a couple of familiar works by Mozart and Gluck, we get a wild "Venga pur," from Mozart's Mitridate, rè di Ponto, that has runs, trills, and temperament galore; an aria from Haydn's Il ritorno di Tobia that plumbs vocal depths; and a vivid, vicious scene from Gluck's Iphigénie en Aulide. Her tone manages to be both dark and brilliant at once. She's a great singing actress, with style to burn.


ERICK LICHTE


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Johnny Cash: American Recordings
American 45520-2 (CD). 1994. Rick Rubin, prod.; Jim Scott, eng. AAD? TT: 41:54

In hindsight, it seems so obvious that an artist like Johnny Cash would make a recording in which he's musically stripped bare. But in the mid-'90s, Rick Rubin's minimalist recording of Cash singing classic cowboy ballads alongside Leonard Cohen standards and new songs by Glen Danzig seemed fresh and daring. Almost 20 years later, Cash's American Recordings sounds as vital and authentic as anything that's been put on tape. Reduced solely to Cash's voice and guitar, American Recordings has a depth of sound and soul that few albums ever achieve. The exquisitely chosen songs orbit around the gravity of Cash's bass-baritone voice, re-creating and perpetuating the American myth of Johnny Cash as priestly assassin and loving loner, an evil beast trying to be good and a man of God reveling in his own sins. (XVII-7, XVIII-2)

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Eriks Edenvalds: Passion and Resurrection
Carolyn Sampson, soprano; Polyphony, Britten Sinfonia, Stephen Layton
Hyperion CDA67796 (CD). Adrian Peacock, prod.; David Hinnitt, eng. DDD. TT: 64:09

Fresh voices in classical music are few and far between. While many composers are able to make a splash by overusing a certain musical texture, chord structure, or precious mood, very few are able to sound uniquely themselves while still expressing the full range of human emotions. In the last 20 years, no writer of choral music has shown as much range as Eriks Edenvalds, a young composer hailing from the musically rich country of Latvia. Edenvalds has been widely recorded and performed, but to date, the album most representative of his work is this one by the English ensemble Polyphony, which includes Edenvalds' first long-form work for choir, Passion and Resurrection. Though the singing and sound are a bit steely, the music is utterly sublime. It is my steadfast hope that Edenvalds continues to grow as a composer and push his musical voice into new waters, resisting the temptation to stagnate or parody himself in the way other big-name choral composers have done.


JOHN MARKS


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Blossom Dearie: Verve Jazz Masters 51
Blossom Dearie, voice, piano; Ray Brown, bass; Kenny Burrell, Herb Ellis, guitar; Jo Jones, drums; others
Verve 529 906-2 (CD). 1956–1960/1996. Norman Granz, orig. prod.; Michael Lang, compilation supervisor; Steve Fallone, remastering. A?D. TT: 52:45

Blossom Dearie plays piano on all but one track of this survey of her early US recordings for Norman Granz's Verve Records. (She had previously recorded for Michel Legrand in France, where her roommate had been Annie Ross, later of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.) Her touch is light, but her playing is quietly convincing. She effortlessly meshes with Oscar Peterson's rhythm section of the time, augmented by Count Basie's drummer of the time. I point out those peer connections to show that Dearie is seriously underrated as a musician. Dearie's airy voice is one of a kind, and her approach to a song could be a bit cerebral or gently ironic in ways Julie London was not. And that's her given name, not a stage name. Her surname is a variant of the Scots name "Deery." A charming introduction to a unique interpreter, at a bargain price. (XXXIV-2)

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Joel Frederiksen & Ensemble Phoenix Munich: Requiem for a Pink Moon: An Elizabethan Tribute to Nick Drake
Music by Nick Drake, Anonymous, Campion, Cavendish, Dowland, Frederiksen
Harmonia Mundi HMC 902111 (CD). 2012. Markus Heiland, prod., eng. DDD. TT: 65:53

Requiem for a Pink Moon has become one of those special albums I make a point not to listen to too frequently—I don't want to lose the sense of magic. Joel Frederiksen's previous work had not prepared me for such a reaction, for which I can think of two possible reasons: First, it must have been liberating for an early-music specialist to make a concept album that, by its nature, would be immune from picky academic criticism. Second, Frederiksen's personal engagement with Nick Drake, as an artist and as a person, brought a passionate intensity to the creative process and a forthright fearlessness to the execution. This is the most singular album I have encountered in decades, and a magnificent recording job, too. (XXXV-12)


STEPHEN MEJIAS


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Valgeir Sigurdsson: The Architecture of Loss
Bedroom Community HVALUR 013 (LP). 2012. Valgeir Sigurdsson, prod., eng. DDD? TT: 38:01

Every time I see High Water Sounds' Jeffrey Catalano, he introduces me to another outstanding piece of music that I need to own immediately. At the 2012 Rocky Mountain Audio Fest, that was The Architecture of Loss, the third album by Valgeir Sigurdsson, the Icelandic composer and founder of the excellent Bedroom Community label. Originally composed for Stephen Petronio's dance company, this sweetly sorrowful, trembling music has been performed live by Sigurdsson, acclaimed violist Nadia Sirota, gifted keyboardist Nico Muhly, and multi-instrumentalist extraordinaire Shahzad Ismaily. I missed the recent performance here in NYC, but I've fallen in love with the LP. Its sumptuous sound, spacious, detailed, and pure, impressed everyone in Catalano's room—and should do the same for you in yours.

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Swans: The Seer
Young God YG45 (2 CDs/3 LPs/WAV). 2012. Michael Gira, prod.; Kevin McMahon, Bryce Goggin, engs.; Doug Henderson, mastering. DDD? TT: 119:20

Michael Gira's Swans is one of those bands that I'd known about forever but had somehow managed to neglect until now. Why did I wait so long?! Anchored by its 30-minute title track, the band's 12th full-length album is a thrilling, unsettling, uncompromising masterpiece—my favorite album of 2012. Swans employ acoustic and electric guitars, thunderous percussion, harmonica, violin, clarinet, cello, piano, vibraphone, accordion, bells, samples, synthesizers, and more, fusing no wave, post-punk, primal blues, and the most violent noise. It's a terrifying and beautiful work, and by this time next year I fully expect to have devoured the band's entire catalog.


PAUL MESSENGER


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Ry Cooder: Paradise and Lunch
Reprise K44260 (LP), Warner Bros. 7599272122 (CD). 1974/1987. Russ Titelman, Lenny Waronker, prods.; Lee Herschberg, eng., mix. AAA/AAD. TT: 36:51

Ry Cooder's fourth solo album, from 1974, tends to be overlooked—unjustly, in my opinion. I have most (if not all) of Cooder's early solo albums, yet this is the one I turn to most often, not only for an idiosyncratic collection of songs that are full of wit, humor, and irony, but also for the recording quality, which is among the best I've heard. Mercifully free from any "concept," it's a wry and eclectic collection of fine American songs that have stood the test of time, and is one of a handful of discs I play to visitors, who invariably jot down the details before they leave.

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Joni Mitchell: Travelogue
Nonesuch 79817-2 (2 HDCDs). 2002. Joni Mitchell, Larry Klein, prods.; Geoff Foster, Helik Hadar, engs.; Allen Sides, mix; Bernie Grundman, mastering. DDD? TT: 2:07:05

She might not be as prolific as Bob Dylan, but Joni Mitchell has few peers in the crafting of great songs. A "greatest hits" compilation tends to clump together studio recordings that were made across the decades, but 2002's Travelogue is refreshingly different. Mitchell's voice has dropped in pitch and become much huskier over the years, but her powers of interpretation have, if anything, significantly improved. It was therefore a stroke of near-genius to rerecord a "best of" compilation that accompanies her late-period voice with full orchestra and chorus—check out "The Sire of Sorrow (Job's Sad Song)" and weep! (XXVI-4)


FRED MILLS


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The Beach Boys: Surf's Up
Brother/Capitol 5 04439 2 (CD). 1971/2012. Beach Boys, prods.; Mark Linett, Alan Boyd, Dennis Wolfe, reissue prods. AAD. TT: 33:40

Remastered and reissued this year as part of the Beach Boys' overhyped and underperforming 50th anniversary and tour, Surf's Up (1971) first surfaced on CD in 1990, and again in 2000 as half of a twofer (with 1970's Sunflower). Raise your hand if you also own the vintage Quadraphonic vinyl. Catalog cash-in notwithstanding, its subtle charms—which seduced a teenage yours truly back in the LP era—endure. The late, angel-throated Carl Wilson in particular shines here, and with two of brother Brian's greatest-ever tunes, "'Til I Die" and "Surf's Up," closing things out (the latter, co-written with Van Dyke Parks, was originally slated for the doomed Smile), the listener is left levitating in ecstasy as the final notes fade away. To this day, I get misty when I hear those songs—that teenage me gently inhabiting my being for a precious few minutes. (XIV-2)

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Grimes: Visions
Arbutus/4AD CAD3208 (CD). 2012. Claire Boucher, prod., eng.; Sebastian Cowan, eng. DDD? TT: 47:58

Some call it "witch house," the microgenre Grimes (aka Claire Boucher, of Vancouver) supposedly inhabits alongside other contemporary female electronica mavens such as Lykke Li or Zola Jesus. Ultimately, though, this complex yet synapse-stroking femme-pop is as accessible—and potentially memorable, given the composer's operatic pipes—as Minnie Ripperton, Kate Bush, or Madonna. A perky '60s girl-group vibe collides with lush '80s synth lines and the abstract glitchiness of early-'90s techno artists. I've attended Grimes performances—an intriguing mixture of bravado, naïveté, and face-painted performance art—and can testify that whether you want to adopt, worship, or sleep with her, you won't come away unchanged by her visions. (XXXV-5)

COMMENTS
dalethorn's picture

When I first saw this post I had a thought - what if I weren't familiar with Stereophile and just found this on the Web by chance? It's like finding money and not having to pay taxes on it, or finding love and not having to stay home at night.

Edit: Ordered the Saint-Saens. Now who would have dreamed in 1959 that someone would be ordering this to rip to WAV/FLAC tracks to play on a USB DAC in 2013?

volvic's picture

Kudos to Fred Mills for chosing Grime's Visions album as one of his 2013's records to die for.  A fantastic album and group.  

Nick 

Not Scroggins's picture

I love the idea of posting your favorite albums and musicians. It's a great way to find music I wouldn't have seen or heard any other way. 

If you were to post links to the albums being presented that would be an amazing help for us. Instead, copy and pasting and then trying to find the artist on a site that can then be played on my mobile device is tedious and deters me from wanting to continue. 

I read your articles online and in print. When I have free time when I'm away from home I love to glance at your site and see what's new. Please help us expand our musical understanding and knowledge!

Ariel Bitran's picture

hi not,

thanks for your suggestion.

a link to which source would be helpful for you?

youtube?

spotify?

or were you thinking something totally different?

Thanks

dalethorn's picture

Saint-Saens with Munch/Boston Symphony arrived today - an RCA Victor "Living Stereo" CD. Recorded in 1959, it was apparently one of the first true stereo recordings to enjoy widespread distribution on Long Playing (LP) records. There's a detailed description of the planning process for this recording in the liner notes, and given what we know about stereo recording today, it's an informative and entertaining read. The digital restoration was apparently done circa 1993, which I presume would allow the newer and better analog-to-digital converters to be used for the final master.

I use headphones only, but I imagine from what I've heard in four playings today, this would sound really great on a high end loudspeaker system. I started with the ATH ESW11 and thought the stereo image wasn't good, at least at the beginning. Switched to the new Soundmagic HP200 and it didn't get any better, and the sound was strident in places. Then for the third try, Earpods with Dirac music player. Heavenly - real depth - it sounded like I was there. Lastly a spin with the Sennheiser IE800 - better yet.

I wouldn't necessarily recommend this recording on most mid-fi gear, since I think the sound (massed violins especially) can get a little hard or steely in places. It might play better on a valve/tube amplifier, but even on low-budget solid state gear the Dirac/Earpods and IE800 make it sound real. Highly recommended.

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