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Stephen Perillo's music
really deserves a wider audience, as its characterful
combination of deliberately mundane thematic material,
satirical or ironic whimsy, colorful orchestration, and
vivacious rhythmic energy suggest a sort of
less-pretentious Alfred Schnittke, or perhaps Poulenc on
steroids. Napoli! obviously evokes the sunny Italy of
Perillo's ancestry (and livelihood: in real life he
manages a well-known travel firm), with faux-Neapolitan
tunes clothed in often-deranged instrumental dress. The
result, alternately innocent and ominous, bears a
striking conceptual resemblance to works such as
Schnittke's poly-stylistic (K)ein Sommernachtstraum.
Poulenc inhabits the world of Piano Concerto No. 1,
nowhere more so than in its lovely, neo-classical (sort
of) slow movement. Like his illustrious French
predecessor, Perillo has a real talent for seamlessly
gliding in and out of any number of seemingly
irreconcilable idioms. Nina Kogan, daughter of the
famous Russian violinist Leonid Kogan, plays the solo
part on a wooden-toned, backwardly balanced instrument
and isn't credited anywhere but in the booklet notes,
but she manages to sound lively and involved all the
same. The zany outer movements, though, really do cry
out for a more brilliant recording of the piano.
Hangoverture, written to
celebrate the new millennium, aptly lives up to its
title. It consists of a potpourri of tunes in various
styles, ranging from a drunken waltz to symphonic jazz.
Like most of Perillo's work, its celebratory character
seems frequently tempered by ominous undercurrents, and
this duality validates much thematic invention that
might otherwise simply sound trite. In other words,
Perillo knows exactly what he's doing, an impression
confirmed by the delicious Antique Suite. The five brief
pieces that comprise the complete work include a
wonderfully lyrical central Canzone and a fourth
movement (entitled "Arpeggios") in which Brahms'
Academic Festival Overture rubs shoulders with the
fugato from the famous Allegretto of Beethoven's
Seventh. Perillo also tosses a harpsichord into the pot
to add spice to the orchestration. The suite is a real
charmer.
As noted above, the sonics
aren't quite ideal: clear, but a touch dry, especially
in the Piano Concerto. Still, given his role as this
disc's producer, we can assume that Perillo got more or
less exactly what he wanted from the very capable
conductor, Yuval Waldman, and his Russian players. This
release only confirms the favorable impression made by
the first disc of Perillo's music on Centaur. Here's a
composer with no harmful inhibitions, speaking in his
own personal voice, and despite the similarities to
other composers noted above for the sake of comparison,
the peculiar mixture of elements that comprises
Perillo's language really sounds like no one else. He's
definitely worth a listen, particularly if you have an
open mind and a sense of humor.
--David Hurwitz |