AmericansLuzerner SinfonieorchesterReview

The Arts Fuse praises album “Americans”

By July 6, 2021 July 28th, 2021 No Comments

The Arts Fuse’s critic Jonathan Blumhofer delivers an encomium on James Gaffigan and the Luzerner Sinfonieorchester’s album “Americans”, published July 6, 2021.

Americans is a winningly-programmed, strongly-realized effort.

Leave it to James Gaffigan and his Luzerner Sinfonieorchester (LSO) to celebrate a sliver of the stylistic diversity of 20th-century American symphonic music. Their album, Americans, is not, of course, a comprehensive survey. But it covers the principal musical touchstones of the place and times, particularly its blend of high- and popular-art, experimentalism, and traditionalism.

The latter is best represented in a pair of pieces by Samuel Barber: the vigorous Overture to “The School for Scandal” and the grand Toccata Festiva for organ and orchestra.

Barber wrote the Toccata in 1960 to inaugurate Philadelphia’s Academy of Music’s new organ. It’s a magnificent score, marked by bold fanfares, agile rhythmic episodes, soaring lyrical lines, and — at its climax — a stunning pedal cadenza.

As played here by Paul Jacobs, the Toccata’s virtuosic solo demands sound, if not exactly easy, then at least perfectly natural. Indeed, Jacobs brings terrific purpose and style to his performance.

So do Gaffigan and his ensemble, which plays with rich tone and a winning sense of dialogue: articulations and timbres between organ and orchestra throughout are conspicuously well-matched.

The orchestra brings strong stylistic sensibilities, too, to Leonard Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from “West Side Story. Gaffigan and the LSO do themselves proud. The “Prologue” simmers, “Cool” brims with color, the “Rumble” is taut and lively, the “Finale” texturally clean. Character and subtlety are watchwords, as in the execution of “Somewhere’s” discreet harp harmonics and horn solo or, more generally, in the “Cha-cha’s” graceful turns of phrase.

Between the Bernstein and Barber selections comes Charles Ives’ Symphony no. 3 and Ruth Crawford Seeger’s “Andante for Strings.”

The latter is a short piece, only running about four minutes, that’s essentially a study in pulsing dissonances. Gaffigan draws a bracing, well-shaped reading from the LSO strings.

His account of the Ives is similarly directed. This is a performance that really moves: clocking in at about twenty minutes flat, Gaffigan’s take is about three minutes faster than either of Michael Tilson Thomas’s. The opening movement, “The Old Folks Gathering,” is lean and flowing, the bass line is perfectly weighted, and its hymn tunes unfold with bewitching clarity. Likewise, the second, “Children’s Day,” offers more of the same qualities – plus moments of real whimsy (like the iterations of the music’s halting, march-like figures). The finale, “Communion,” continues much in the same vein: tempos flow, the thick chords speak pungently, the lyrical line is always front-and-center, and there’s a lovely dissolve into the chiming church bells at movement’s end.

Gaffigan’s larger approach to the Symphony is rooted in its lyricism, and that aspect of Ives’ writing comes out with urgency.

In all, then, Americans is a winningly-programmed, strongly-realized effort. Gaffigan’s interpretations are decidedly unsentimental but they never miss the essence of the music at hand. The LSO’s playing is technically accomplished and stylistically right. HM’s engineering ensures that everything shines.

To read the full review, click here.

X