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Acclaim
Justin Dello Joio: A new recording features three important pieces
"Oceans Apart is a 19-minute concerto for piano and orchestra; the recording is of the premiere in Boston. Dello Joio says:
'Writing this piece conjured to my mind the unlikely images of big wave surfers; one person surrounded—nearly consumed—by the daunting force and fury of these massive 100-foot walls of water. That scale feels akin to the relationship of a piano soloist and the force of a large symphony orchestra, whose sound is a vibration that manifests as a wave.'
"The opening and closing sounds of the sea are conjured through orchestral special effects a bit in the Lutoslawski manner, while the piano part is a fearless update of the Romantic tradition. It’s a good thing Garrick Ohlsson is large and in charge.
"Ohlsson was 74 at the concerto’s premiere this past January, and deserves true kudos not just for his amazing performance but also for simply showing up in the first place. The famous pianist could be resting on his laurels and only playing superb renditions of Chopin and Beethoven for his devoted fans, but Ohlsson is still in the trenches, passionately promoting complex and technically difficult new music. (Also recommended: Garrick Ohlsson’s previous recording of Justin Dello Joio’s Two Concert Etudes and Piano Sonata.)
"The structure of Oceans Apart is very tight, and includes such discernible elements as introduction, allegro, big tune, cadenza, apotheosis, and coda. Dello Joio’s ear is immaculate and the performance could not be better. This is a major new piano concerto.
"Due Per Due rattles and sighs like a grumpy demon who has seen better days. Indeed, the first movement, “Elegia - to an Old Musician” is for Dello Joio’s father, the famed composer Norman Dello Joio, an associate of Martha Graham. After a certain amount of moping about, a truly glorious cello melody bursts forth with lush piano harmonies in support. The second movement, “Moto Perpetuo” is more straightforward, a chromatic allegro sent straight down the track, a stellar display piece for eminent virtuosos Carter Brey and Christopher O'Riley.
"Blue and Gold Music begins with the Zimbelstern stop on the organ, an ancient toy for tinkling random bells. The work was written for Trinity School’s 300th Anniversary and the title Blue and Gold Music references the school colors. This somewhat unlikely commission would result in a full-throated salute to the “Americana” tradition of formal composition: Aaron Copland, Roy Harris, Samuel Barber, Leonard Bernstein, Morton Gould, Norman Dello Joio, and so forth. Naturally, the members of the American Brass Quintet are given tuneful lines in the “Fanfare for the Common Man” idiom, but that impish sophisticated offspring Justin Dello Joio undoes all that from deep inside a dense contrapuntal web. (Copland could only dream of such sophistication.) I’ve been unable to stop listening to Blue and Gold Music since getting the recording; this music is exactly what I wanted." * * * * * — Ethan Iverson,
Transitional Technology
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