
Chinese Classics - Ge Gan-Ru, Fall of Baghdad / Modern Works
GE GAN-RU String Quartets: No. 1, âFuâ; No. 4, âAngel Suiteâ; No. 5, âFall of Baghdadâ ⢠ModernWorks ⢠NAXOS 8.570603 (60:44)
Prior to this review Iâd read a short profile of the composer in the Times , and discovered for a substantial period of time heâd dropped out of sight to found a business that now supports him and allows him freedom to compose as he wishes. As such, he may be the âChinese Charles Ives.â Whatever the reason, these three string quartets show his evolution over that time gap, with No. 1 from 1983, and Nos. 4 and 5 from 1998 and 2007, respectively.
No. 1, âFuâ (Prose Poem), is in a single movement, and while it uses a number of special techniques for strings, the influence of middle-period BartĂłk is most evident, at least to my ear. This was radical music in context for a young Chinese composer, but not necessarily for the outside world. But No. 4, âAngel Suite,â is an exceedingly rich and original piece. In a way, it shouldnât be, as it references the Western classical tradition most overtly, and indeed has a strong scent of the last fin de siècle. But though I hear Debussy very strongly throughout (above all in the first movement), its movementsâincluding a dark waltz and similarly unsettling marchâremain so full of interesting ideas and details that a strong personality cannot help but emerge. I found this music totally engaging, with a âpostmodernâ take that was never ironic, facile, or pastichesque.
No. 5 is subtitled âThe Fall of Baghdad.â In its reference to destruction âin time of war,â itâs an homage to George Crumbâs 1970 Black Angels, and it opens with similarly wrenching, screeching sounds. The second movement features an extended, distant viola melody that recalls a muzzeinâs call to prayer, which after an interlude of sinister rhythms using col legno and pizzicato, returns to the stratosphere. The third, âDesolation,â has a heartrending violin solo over pianissimo chords that suggest the classic âvoice crying in the wilderness.â (No more so than when dark crunching sounds are ripped from behind the instrumentsâ bridges.) While the work starts out a little too reminiscent of its inspiration, like all the works on this program, Ge is in the details. It takes a little time, but a new, personal music emerges without any enormous technical or stylistic breakthrough; this is actually an enormous accomplishment. And lest I sound too technical, the musicâs conclusion is shattering. Weâve got real art here.
ModernWorks is a string quartet directed by cellist Madeline Shapiro. (The other players are Airi Yoshioka and Majuki Fukuhara, violins, and Veronica Salas, viola.) They interpret this music brilliantly, and they have done great service to music by advocating this creator. I hope this recording finds a large audience, or at least the right audience. This composer has something to say, and staying power.
FANFARE: Robert Carl
GE GAN-RU String Quartets: No. 1, âFuâ; No. 4, âAngel Suiteâ; No. 5, âFall of Baghdadâ ⢠ModernWorks ⢠NAXOS 8.570603 (60:44)
Prior to this review Iâd read a short profile of the composer in the Times , and discovered for a substantial period of time heâd dropped out of sight to found a business that now supports him and allows him freedom to compose as he wishes. As such, he may be the âChinese Charles Ives.â Whatever the reason, these three string quartets show his evolution over that time gap, with No. 1 from 1983, and Nos. 4 and 5 from 1998 and 2007, respectively.
No. 1, âFuâ (Prose Poem), is in a single movement, and while it uses a number of special techniques for strings, the influence of middle-period BartĂłk is most evident, at least to my ear. This was radical music in context for a young Chinese composer, but not necessarily for the outside world. But No. 4, âAngel Suite,â is an exceedingly rich and original piece. In a way, it shouldnât be, as it references the Western classical tradition most overtly, and indeed has a strong scent of the last fin de siècle. But though I hear Debussy very strongly throughout (above all in the first movement), its movementsâincluding a dark waltz and similarly unsettling marchâremain so full of interesting ideas and details that a strong personality cannot help but emerge. I found this music totally engaging, with a âpostmodernâ take that was never ironic, facile, or pastichesque.
No. 5 is subtitled âThe Fall of Baghdad.â In its reference to destruction âin time of war,â itâs an homage to George Crumbâs 1970 Black Angels, and it opens with similarly wrenching, screeching sounds. The second movement features an extended, distant viola melody that recalls a muzzeinâs call to prayer, which after an interlude of sinister rhythms using col legno and pizzicato, returns to the stratosphere. The third, âDesolation,â has a heartrending violin solo over pianissimo chords that suggest the classic âvoice crying in the wilderness.â (No more so than when dark crunching sounds are ripped from behind the instrumentsâ bridges.) While the work starts out a little too reminiscent of its inspiration, like all the works on this program, Ge is in the details. It takes a little time, but a new, personal music emerges without any enormous technical or stylistic breakthrough; this is actually an enormous accomplishment. And lest I sound too technical, the musicâs conclusion is shattering. Weâve got real art here.
ModernWorks is a string quartet directed by cellist Madeline Shapiro. (The other players are Airi Yoshioka and Majuki Fukuhara, violins, and Veronica Salas, viola.) They interpret this music brilliantly, and they have done great service to music by advocating this creator. I hope this recording finds a large audience, or at least the right audience. This composer has something to say, and staying power.
FANFARE: Robert Carl
Original: $13.99
-65%$13.99
$4.90Description
GE GAN-RU String Quartets: No. 1, âFuâ; No. 4, âAngel Suiteâ; No. 5, âFall of Baghdadâ ⢠ModernWorks ⢠NAXOS 8.570603 (60:44)
Prior to this review Iâd read a short profile of the composer in the Times , and discovered for a substantial period of time heâd dropped out of sight to found a business that now supports him and allows him freedom to compose as he wishes. As such, he may be the âChinese Charles Ives.â Whatever the reason, these three string quartets show his evolution over that time gap, with No. 1 from 1983, and Nos. 4 and 5 from 1998 and 2007, respectively.
No. 1, âFuâ (Prose Poem), is in a single movement, and while it uses a number of special techniques for strings, the influence of middle-period BartĂłk is most evident, at least to my ear. This was radical music in context for a young Chinese composer, but not necessarily for the outside world. But No. 4, âAngel Suite,â is an exceedingly rich and original piece. In a way, it shouldnât be, as it references the Western classical tradition most overtly, and indeed has a strong scent of the last fin de siècle. But though I hear Debussy very strongly throughout (above all in the first movement), its movementsâincluding a dark waltz and similarly unsettling marchâremain so full of interesting ideas and details that a strong personality cannot help but emerge. I found this music totally engaging, with a âpostmodernâ take that was never ironic, facile, or pastichesque.
No. 5 is subtitled âThe Fall of Baghdad.â In its reference to destruction âin time of war,â itâs an homage to George Crumbâs 1970 Black Angels, and it opens with similarly wrenching, screeching sounds. The second movement features an extended, distant viola melody that recalls a muzzeinâs call to prayer, which after an interlude of sinister rhythms using col legno and pizzicato, returns to the stratosphere. The third, âDesolation,â has a heartrending violin solo over pianissimo chords that suggest the classic âvoice crying in the wilderness.â (No more so than when dark crunching sounds are ripped from behind the instrumentsâ bridges.) While the work starts out a little too reminiscent of its inspiration, like all the works on this program, Ge is in the details. It takes a little time, but a new, personal music emerges without any enormous technical or stylistic breakthrough; this is actually an enormous accomplishment. And lest I sound too technical, the musicâs conclusion is shattering. Weâve got real art here.
ModernWorks is a string quartet directed by cellist Madeline Shapiro. (The other players are Airi Yoshioka and Majuki Fukuhara, violins, and Veronica Salas, viola.) They interpret this music brilliantly, and they have done great service to music by advocating this creator. I hope this recording finds a large audience, or at least the right audience. This composer has something to say, and staying power.
FANFARE: Robert Carl























