New CDs for September 2020
Orchestral, Concertos and Chamber Music
Paul Ben-Haim – Symphony No. 2
Czech National Sympony Orchestra- 20th Century Visions
Piano Music
Amanda Maier & Julius Rontgen – Amanda & Julius: Works for Piano
Jazz
Rez Abbasi – Django-Shift
Aditya Prakash Ensemble – Diaspora Kid
Avishai Cohen – Big Vicious
Gigi Gryce – The Classic Albums 1955-1960
Mike Longo – Live from New York!
Alexa Tarantino – Winds of Change
Samoa Wilson with the Jim Kweskin Band – I Just Want To Be Horizontal
Opera, Opera Excerpts, Choral Music and Art Songs
Lawrence Conservatory Contemporary Music Ensemble – A La Par
Will Liverman & Jonathan King – Whither Must I Wander
Sir Hubert Parry – Songs of Farewell & works by Stanford, Gray & Wood
Popular Music
Billie Eilish – When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?
Gangstagrass – Broken Hearts and Stolen Money
Jake La Botz – They’re Coming For Me
Cary Morin – Tiny Town
Lou Reed – Lou Reed
Lou Reed – Transformer
SUSS – High Line
White Whale Records – The Land of Sensations & Delights: The Psych Pop Sounds of White Whale Records 1965-1970
Percussion Music
Sandbox Percussion – And That One Too
UVA Percussion Ensemble – Speed of Sound
Arachnophonia: Amanda Maier
Editor’s note: Arachnophonia is a regular feature on our blog where members of the UR community can share their thoughts about resources from the Parsons Music Library‘s collection.
All links included in these posts will take you to either the library catalog record(s) for the item(s) in question or to additional relevant information from around the web.
Today’s installment of Arachnophonia is by Music Librarian Dr. Linda Fairtile and features Amanda Maier, an overlooked woman composer who lived from 1853-1894. Thanks, Dr. Fairtile!
Amanda Maier
If you look up Amanda Maier in Grove Music Online, the self-styled “world’s premier online music encyclopedia,” you’ll find that she was the first wife of composer Julius Röntgen, as well as a violinist who studied at the Stockholm Conservatory. But Maier (1853-1894) wasn’t “only” a wife and a violinist; she was also a gifted composer whose music was praised by both Brahms and Grieg. After hearing a recording of Maier’s violin concerto on the radio, I resolved to add the works of this unjustly neglected composer to Parsons Music Library’s collection.
Jennifer Martyn, herself a violinist, has filled in some of Maier’s background. Maier’s performing career essentially ended when she married Julius Röntgen, her violin teacher’s son, but she continued to compose until a few years prior to her tragically early death, from a lung ailment, at the age of forty-one.
Two CDs recently acquired by Parsons Music Library are simply titled Amanda Maier, volumes 1 and 2 (call numbers RM3.1 .M36 2016 and RM3.1 .M36 2017) They are the brainchild of Swedish producer Erik Nilsson, who plans to record all of Maier’s works. Volume 1 contains the first movement of her Violin Concerto in D Minor, performed by violinist Gregory Maytan and the Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Andreas Stoehr (unfortunately, the second and third movements have been lost). Maier’s final work, her Piano Quartet in E Minor, is played by Maytan with Bernt Lysell (viola), Sara Wijk (cello), and Ann-Sofi Klingberg (piano). The Quartet is a profound work, with a dramatic first movement, a lyrical second movement reminiscent of Brahms, a dancelike third movement, and an exuberant finale. Klingberg also accompanies Maytan on the Swedish Tunes and Dances that Maier and her husband composed together.
Volume 2 of Amanda Maier contains her best known work, the passionate Sonata in B Minor for Violin and Piano, here performed by violinist Cecilia Zilliacus and pianist Bengt Forsberg. This duo also plays her Nine Pieces for Violin and Piano, only six of which have ever been published. Maier’s vocal music is represented on this recording by four unpublished songs setting texts by the now-forgotten poet Carl-David af Wirsén. Soprano Sabina Bisholt and pianist Bengt Forsberg perform these rather melancholy pieces.
Parsons Music Library will soon have three other CDs of Amanda Maier’s music (Amanda Maier, vol. 3, Amanda & Julius, and Amanda Maier Meets Johannes Brahms), as well scores of her Piano Quartet and her Sonata for Violin and Piano (arranged for flute). Most of Maier’s music remains unpublished or exists only in rare 19th-century editions, many of which have been uploaded to IMSLP. We will continue to collect the music of this undeservedly forgotten composer as it becomes available.
Leah Broad devotes an episode of her podcast “Notes on Notes” to Amanda Maier, which includes video performances of Maier’s music:
https://notesonnotespodcast.com/2019/04/19/5-short-notes-on-amanda-maier/
And here is a fascinating video about the rediscovery of Maier’s Piano Trio in E flat:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dF7-AtKhZds
New CDs added – January 2020
New CDs for January 2020
Concertos, Orchestral, and Chamber Music
Lucas Debargue- Scarlatti: 52 Sonatas
Philip Glass – Annunciation
Amanda Maier – Amanda Maier Meets Johannes Brahms
Amanda Maier – Amanda Maier: Volume 1
Amanda Maier – Amanda Maier: Volume 2
Electronic Music
Matthew Burtner – Glacier Music
Matthew Burtner – Metasaxophone Colossus
Matthew Burtner – Portals of Distortion
Opera, Opera Excerpts and Art Songs
Philip Glass – The Fall of the House of Usher
Choral Music
Margaret Bonds – The Ballad of the Brown King & Selected Songs
Percussion
Steve Reich – Drumming
Jazz
Champian Fulton & Cory Weeds – Dream A Little …
Johnny Griffin & Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis – Ow! Live at the Penthouse