The life story of Danish composer
Thomas Koppel is not unlike that of many of his younger contemporaries. Born the son of eminent Danish composer
Herman D. Koppel,
Thomas Koppel's sense of independence as a classical pianist was so extreme that the Royal Danish Academy of Music failed him, and in revolt, he began the experimental rock group Savage Rose with his brother
Anders Koppel and single-named vocalist Annisette, whom
Thomas Koppel later married. Politically radical in the extreme and willfully fusing the boundaries of rock with jazz and classical music, Savage Rose became an institution in Denmark and a cause celèbre elsewhere among aficionados of underground rock music. Notwithstanding the popularity of Savage Rose,
Koppel remained in the pursuit of contemporary composition, which became an overriding concern in the last 15 years of his life. Several of the pieces that
Koppel wrote in this later period were composed for renowned Danish recorder player
Michala Petri, and work on this DaCapo release featuring
Petri, Los Angeles Street Concerto, was completed only three months before
Koppel suddenly passed away at age 61.
Koppel's Moonchild's Dream was recorded by
Petri for RCA Victor in 1992, and it took three years for RCA to release it; disappointingly that recording didn't get a lot of attention in the U.S. Here it is heard in a transparent performance with the
KREMERata BALTICA under
Bo Holten.
Koppel was an expert film and television composer, and when Moonchild's Dream begins, one might think "this is sort of like a concerto by
R. Carlos Nakai scored by
Michael Kamen." However, once past the introductory section, the listener is treated to a colorful, rich, and emotionally responsive palette of melodic ideas that are ordered into an effective and natural kind of psychological progression. This same approach to form is true of Nele's Dances, a suite of 10 pieces, some very short, that all skillfully hook together in a way that suggests a longer, single-movement work. Scored for recorder and archlute, the latter played by
Lars Hannibal,
Koppel takes the arcane archlute out of its expected continuo context and approaches the instrument as if it were a cross between a guitar and a kantele. In Los Angeles Street Concerto,
Koppel stretches out a bit more musically. Although the beginning of the piece seems less than finished, parts of the remainder are reminiscent of
Bartók's "night music." Los Angeles Street Concerto is more about the atmosphere of L.A. than of the street itself, and it is certainly not "street" in the hip-hop sense that many might take it. All of the musicianship on Los Angeles Street Concerto is top drawer, and
Petri is at her best, sounding sweet without being excessively peppy or penetrating.
With his dual citizenship within the fields of pop and classical and his pursuit of accessible and communicative, but not new-agey styles,
Thomas Koppel appears to have been ahead of the curve in terms of developments in art music in the early twenty first century. It is a pity that, for the whim of fate, he will not be joining us to share its development henceforward, but Los Angeles Street Concerto is a terrific introduction in terms of
Thomas Koppel's contribution to art music.