Thomas Larcher: Madhares, ECM 2010 At the beginning of Thomas Larcher’s 2007 piano concerto “Böse
Zellen,” or “Malignant Cells” – the
first work on an ECM disk devoted to the forty-six-year-old Austrian
composer – the voice of the piano is stifled. Larcher asks for
the instrument to be altered in the style of John Cage, with rubber
wedges inserted between the lower strings and gaffer tape applied to
the upper register. The timbres that result from these operations lack
the twinkling exoticism of Cage’s prepared-piano music: the piano
makes a sullen, thudding sound, as if trapped behind Plexiglas. It sounds
more like a machine, not less. At the beginning, the piano presents
stark chords in and around E minor, and a steel ball is rolled on the
strings to produce a metallic glissando, like that of a slide guitar.
Over four movements, the music lurches between hectic orchestral noises
and plaintive tonal harmonies, until, in a climactic passage, the wedges
are removed, the tape is ripped off the strings, and the piano is allowed
to sing out fully. The ending is hauntingly spare, with major and minor
chords in alternation. Alex Ross: Uncanny Voices. New CDs of Chopin, Thomas Larcher, and Bach,
The New Yorker, August 2010 The music is dislocated, muffled, struggling to form itself, with traces
of tonal gestures buried deep within. It’s as if the composer,
after a nuclear holocaust, were trying to remember what classical music
had once been. This is the sound picture first presented by Böse
Zellen (“Malign Cells”, though best translated as
“Free Radicals”), the opening work on this outstanding CD
of compositions by Thomas Larcher. Geoff Brown: Thomas Larcher: Madhares. Some movements screech or chunter
on; others linger in Schubert’s shadow or trace the shape of a
song from Nepal, The Times, May 7 2010 Though he first made his name as a top-flight pianist, Thomas Larcher (born 1963) now devotes most of his time to composition, as part of an outstanding generation of Austrian composers that also includes Olga Neuwirth, Beat Furrer, Georg Friedrich Haas and Johannes Maria Staud. Larcher's music, though, is distinctly different from that of any of his near contemporaries. As these three works from the last decade show, Larcher ranges very widely in his influences, and most often well away from the mainstream of European music in the last 30 years. Böse Zellen, with its allusions to the musical past, aleatoric passages juxtaposed with tonal sequences and the persistent alienating effect of prepared-piano sounds suggests George Crumb more than say, Lachenmann, just as the romantic gestures and moments of frenzied activity of the viola work Still recall Schnittke and Kancheli rather than anyone closer to home. Madhares is different again, yet far more distinctive in its unlikely blend of styles. Andrew Clements: Larcher: Böse Zellen; Still; Madhares, The Guardian,
May 6 2010 Austrian composer Thomas Larcher (born 1963), at once experimental and responsive to tradition, isn‘t as well-known as he should be. This world premiere recording of his String Quartet No 3 (Madhares), minutely detailed in its multiplying patterns and crazily interweaving motifs, shows him at his best. Two other contrasting works (Böse Zellen, Still) feature pianist Fellner and viola player Kashkashian. All told, a bracing, exhilarating way to discover Larcher. Fiona Maddocks: Thomas Larcher: Madhares, The Observer, May 16 2010
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