On their new
album “Lost In Temptation” the Alliage Quintett presents a multifaceted sound
panorama for saxophone quartet and piano – with works by composers from Henry
Purcell via Johannes Brahms and Camille Saint-Saëns to Kurt Weill.
The make-up
of the Alliage Quintett is unique, consisting as it does of four saxophones and
a piano. But it is this very combination that enables the four saxophonists and
pianist Jang Eun Bae to delight one audience after another with masterpieces
from all eras of music in sophisticated arrangements that respect the
composer’s intentions. So successfully has the Alliage Quintett transferred its
ideals to disc that it has already won the ECHO Klassik award twice. “Lost in
Temptation” is the quintet’s fifth album for Sony Classical, presenting works
from 300 years of music history. There are rousing instrumental movements from
Henry Purcell’s semi-opera “The Fairy Queen”. The Armenian Aram Khachaturian
offers music from his hit ballet “Spartacus”. An arrangement of Johannes Brahms’s
popular song “Guten Abend, gut’ Nacht” joins a Fantasia on five songs from Kurt
Weill’s famous “Threepenny Opera”. And as we have come to expect of the Alliage
Quintett with their multifaceted approach, each and every one of the
arrangements sounds as if it had been written as an original work for the
really rather unusual formation of “Saxophone Quartet + Piano”.
In keeping
with their album title “Lost in Temptation”, the artists celebrate the sensual,
seductive effects of music. For that matter, many of the works deal with human
enticements and temptations such as those of love. Henry Purcell’s semi-opera
“The Fairy Queen” of 1692 is based on Shakespeare’s comedy “A Midsummer Night’s
Dream”, where the love of the royal fairy couple Titania and Oberon is put to
the test. Nor do Purcell’s magic spells in sound fail to enchant the listener
in the quintet’s suite of his operatic instrumental movements. To capture
something of the performance practice of the late 17th century, Alliage
Quintett has commissioned a version that features percussion instruments and
more. Accordingly, Jang Eun Bae has swapped her Classical grand piano for a
Baroque harpsichord.
Further
highlights of “Lost in Temptation” include the famous “Bacchanal” from the
opera “Samson et Dalila” by Camille Saint-Saëns and the “Seven Scottish Airs”
of Englishman Gustav Holst. Other delights are a suite taken from Ottorino
Respighi’s “Antiche arie e danze”, for which he arranged works for lute from
the 16th and 17th century for orchestra. And love and passion are certainly
what makes the world go around in one of the world’s greatest operatic hits –
Kurt Weill’s & Bertolt Brecht’s “Threepenny Opera”. The Alliage Quintett
approached Stefan Malzew and he agreed to arrange five songs from the opera.
But for the founder of the Alliage Quintett, Daniel Gauthier, Malzew has not so
much written a classic arrangement as composed a fast and furious “Threepenny
Opera Fantasy”.
The Alliage
Quintett are touring Australia in February / March, performing with Sabine
Meyer.
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