The music of Austrian composer
Thomas Larcher defies easy categorization. He is clearly an adherent of the tenets of European modernism, but he is more overtly concerned with touching the emotions of his listeners than some of his contemporaries. He has written, "My music is communicative: it challenges the attentive listener but is meant to be readily intelligible in concert,” and that assessment is borne out, with varying degrees of clarity, in the music on this disc. At its most expressive, as in the passionate Still, for viola and chamber orchestra, performed by the soulful
Kim Kashkashian, his music is unambiguously direct and emotionally gripping. Böse Zellen (Malign Cells), a four-movement work for piano and orchestra, begins with an uncompromising severity so that the occasional introduction of familiar elements, such as a simple triad, take on a surprising emotional significance, but by the final movement (a familiar pattern in
Larcher's work) the music blossoms into an austere luminosity not unlike that of
Pärt or
Silvestrov. He describes his third string quartet, Madhares, as evoking the White Mountains of Crete, and the work conjures up imagery of light, purity, and distant mystery. The moments where unencumbered tonal clarity breaks through resonate with a serene melancholy and are a reminder that, for all his sophistication,
Larcher can write with a disarming, transparent simplicity. The performances are all superb: compelling, urgent, and utterly committed.
Dennis Russell Davies leads the
Münchener Kammerorchester in accompanying
Kashkashian and pianist
Till Fellner, and
Quatuor Diotima performs Madhares with complete assurance.
ECM's sound is characteristically immaculate and lively.~Stephen Eddins