Newly available on the Fennesz Bandcamp site today is this ambient piece, previously released on Longform Editions.
Fennesz writes: “The piece was recorded in the last days of May 2024. I discarded my original concepts for this piece right after starting the work. This was partly due to the fact that I happened to listen to a piece by Roland S. Howard that day, who I consider one of the greatest guitarists. So, I started again with a blank canvas. I focused on the essential components and instruments that had defined my work so far: guitars, string instruments in general and samples thereof, as well as a few synthesizers with a particular focus on the now largely forgotten synthesis principle of physical modelling. Microtonality and the decay behaviour of strings were important to me. The piece, conceived as a sound installation, is meant to blend into everyday soundscapes and occasionally stand out. However, it can also be listened to at full volume on headphones.”
by Ben Hogwood Picture of György Kurtág (c) Filarmonia Hungaria
This week there have been celebrations in Budapest as the remarkable Hungarian composer György Kurtág celebrated reaching the great age of 100.
Putting together a playlist of Kurtág’s music is a difficult task, for it is so condensed that usually one is best listening to his listen to his music in short bursts.
Click on the Tidal link below, though, and you will enter a new musical world, where works for orchestra, string quartet, voice and violin, voice and piano and clarinet trio await. They are just some of the extraordinarily wide range of forces Kurtág has written for in his life, and the sequence ends with a major piece, Messages de feu Demoiselle R.V. Troussova (Messages of the Late Miss RV Troussova), completed in 1980 when Kurtág was a mere 54 years old.
If you listen I am sure you will agree he continues to be one of the most unique musical voices around today.
Sir Stephen Hough (piano, below), Lauren Urquhart (soprano), Georgia Mae Ellis (mezzo-soprano), Luis Gomes (tenor), Alexander Grassauer (bass), CBSO Chorus (above), City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra / Omer Meir Wellber (conductor & harpsichord/director)
Beethoven (/Hough) Piano Concerto no.3 in C minor Op.37 (1800, rev. 1803) Haydn Missa in Angustiis, Hob.XXII/11 (‘Nelson Mass’) (1798)
Symphony Hall, Birmingham Thursday 19 February 2026
Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse
That tonight’s concert from the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra featured music by Beethoven and Haydn might have been indicative of a straight-ahead or mainstream concert but, as things turned out, neither programme nor music-making could be deemed predictable.
Sir Stephen Hough has no doubt played Beethoven’s Third Concerto many times with, moreover, his take on the outer movements not far removed from his much-praised Hyperion recording. The initial Allegro was lithe and impetuous if at times a touch hectoring (and Matthew Hardy was uncharacteristically reticent in that spellbinding passage after the cadenza), with the final Rondo treading a fine line between humour and irony at its most distinctive in the modulatory transition to the main theme, or that improvisatory solo flourish prior to the nonchalant coda.
Interest naturally centred on the slow movement – a Largo designated Con gran espressione in its ‘re-imagining’ by Hough (above). Itself part of a project instigated by this evening’s conductor, Omer Meir Wellber, to re-examine works in the core repertoire, this duly retains Beethoven’s instrumentation but renders the main theme, introduced by the soloist, as a hushed chorale for strings which pervades what follows. All well and good had that chorale become more than a static backdrop, against which Hough’s welter of skittish figuration sounded overly confined to the upper register. Neither was the climactic return of the first movement’s principal theme other than an affectation, nor the upsurge leading directly into the finale without contrivance. One respected Hough’s following of his muse, even if the outcome felt less than convincing.
Having not unreasonably given Hough the benefit of any doubt, the audience was nonplussed with his encore – the last of Schoenberg’s Six Little Pieces that, written after Mahler’s funeral on 17th June 1911, yields a rapt eloquence even at less than the ‘very slow’ tempo prescribed.
As searching products of his late maturity, the six ‘name day’ Masses that Haydn wrote around the turn of the 19th century remain too little heard at orchestral concerts; save for the ‘Nelson Mass’ whose actual title, Mass in Troubled Times, makes explicit the cultural turmoil from of which it arose. This must also have occasioned its unyielding orchestration with trumpets and timpani but no woodwind, plus a dextrous continuo part allotted here to harpsichord and from which Wellber directed with a sure sense of where this most combative of masses was headed.
Vocally the solo writing favours soprano and bass, with Alexander Grassauer making the most of his mellifluous contributions and those of Lauren Urquhart impassioned yet tonally uneven in more animated passages. Georgia Mae Ellis and Luis Gomes handled their secondary roles with real finesse, while chorus-master David Young drew a laudable response from the CBSO Chorus (arrayed on stage with what might be felt the choral equivalent of ‘free bowing’). Taut and incisive, the epithet ‘symphonic’ as applied to this work can rarely have been so apposite.
The performance certainly set the seal on a concert which rightly encouraged a reassessment of both works and, by so doing, underlined Wellber’s own interpretative convictions. Having last appeared with the CBSO almost six years before, his return should be so long in coming.
Alberga Dancing with the Shadow (1990, rev. 2021) On a Bat’s Back I do Fly (2000) Langvad (2006).
Lyrita SRCD446 [53’36”] Producer/Engineer Stephen Frost
Recorded 11-12 October 2021 at Wyastone Concert Hall, Wyastone Leys, Monmouth
Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse
What’s the story?
Lyrita issues a further release of music by Eleanor Alberga, featuring three sizable works for chamber ensemble played by Ensemble Arcadiana and which between them amply underline this composer’s flexible while imaginative response when writing for this particular medium.
What’s the music like?
Now in her mid-70s, Alberga came from her native Jamaica to study in London and enjoyed early success as a concert pianist before joining London Contemporary Dance Theatre where she latterly became music director. This past quarter-century has seen her focus increasingly on composition – creating a substantial output as includes a symphony, two violin concertos (both released on Lyrita SRCD405), three string quartets plus a range of other works across the major genres – in an idiom which is contemporary without being obscure or inaccessible.
The earliest and largest of these three works, Dancing with the Shadow started out as music for dance and was commissioned by the ensemble Lontano, which also recorded two of the movements on the second volume of its series British Women Composers (Lorelt LNT103). Taking as its starting-point the Jungian concept of exploring the individual’s darker side or ‘shadow self’, these five movements variously combine the six musicians as part of a steady accumulation taking in the simmering anticipation of a Duo and lilting elegance of a Trio; then the animated interplay of a Quartet, enfolding eloquence of a Quintet (the emotional heart in all senses) and the heady excitement of a Sextet that affords a close as decisive as it is infectious – whether, or not, those competing halves of the psyche have been reconciled.
Each playing continuously, the remaining pieces are no less individual or engaging. Written for the Bournemouth mew-music ensemble Kokoro, On a Bat’s Back I Do Fly takes its cue from Ariel’s song in the final act of Shakespeare’s The Tempest and appealingly tackled by Thomas Arne, whose 1740s song-setting is alluded to over the course of music that proves as dextrous though ultimately as elusive as the text implies. Its title the Danish for ‘length’, Langvad is also a rural hamlet in Denmark as well as the setting for a summer festival run by the composer and her husband. Here the ongoing narrative (if, indeed, there is one) feels as elusive as the sound-world conjured from quintets of wind and strings – one, moreover, likely to prove as personal for each listener as it must no doubt be for the composer herself.
Does it all work?
Very much so. This is ensemble music that, informed and frequently permeated with dance rhythms, makes considerable demands on the technique of its exponents, who duly respond with conviction and audible enjoyment throughout. A pity, perhaps, that another of Alberga’s ensemble works could not have been included, though the programme as it stands can hardly be faulted as a representative overview. Neither does the dance component make these pieces other than self-sufficient in abstract terms and make for an engaging listen in their own right.
Is it recommended?
Indeed it is. The recording is as spacious yet immediate as expected from the acoustics of Wyastone Concert Hall, and there are informative annotations by Donald Sturrock. Those who acquired that previous Lyrita album should not hesitate to investigate this new release.
by Ben Hogwood, with text from the album press release
“British electronic music pioneers Graham Massey (founding member of Manchester legends 808 State) and Brian Dougans (the mind behind acid house milestone Humanoid and one half of The Future Sound Of London) join forces for their debut collaboration In Place Of Language, released on Belgian label De:tuned.
Both 808 State and Humanoid helped shape the UK’s early rave and acid house movement. Here, Massey and Dougans channel that legacy into a beautifully balanced four-track EP that radiates warmth and energy, drawing on more than three decades of experience in electronic music. Inspired by key elements of the ’89-91 era while embracing a contemporary edge, the duo merge their distinct sonic identities into a sound that feels both timeless and forward-looking.
In Place Of Language is not a nostalgia trip, but a natural evolution: a meeting point between foundation and future, and a blueprint for a new wave of electronic experimentation!”
The one track available to hear so far, Optica, is an effective blend of ambience and movement, with spacious keyboards given a good deal of percussion and synthesized squiggles for company. The rush of Balearic warmth at the end bodes well for the rest of the EP, bubbling with energy and movement.
Listen / Buy
Published post no.2,802 – Wednesday 18 February 2026