

MALEK JANDALI CONCERTOS
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra
Notes by Jane Vial Jaffe
A concerto for a woman, played on a famous violin named for a woman, with an orchestra conducted by a woman — what better way to honor “all women who thrive with courage”? Malek Jandali began composing his Violin Concerto in New York City in 2013, completing it in January 2014, originally with violinist Gidon Kremer in mind as the dedicatee. As the project took shape, however, with its emphasis on women who have transcended great obstacles, he rededicated it “To Rachel Barton Pine and to all women who thrive with courage.” Pine recorded it on the 1742 Giuseppe Guarneri “del Gesù” violin, previously known as the “ex-Bazzini” but now as the “ex-Soldat” after violin virtuoso Marie Soldat of Johannes Brahms’s circle. On Brahms’s recommendation she had studied with Joseph Joachim and for a time was the only woman to play the Brahms Violin Concerto. To conduct, Jandali sought out Marin Alsop, one of today’s most successful women in the field, who has recorded most of his symphonic works.
Album Details
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
Malek Jandali
MUSIC PRODUCER
Erich Hofmann
SESSION ENGINEER
Friedrich Trondl
MIXING AND MASTERING
Bill Maylone
ENGINEERING ASSISTANTS
Wilhelm Wimmer
Wolfgang Wesely
EDITING ASSISTANTS
Manuel Radinger
Miloš Ikić
BOOKLET AND COVER PHOTO
Theresa Wey, Dan Carmody
GRAPHIC AND LAYOUT DESIGN
Veselić&Veselić
RECORDED
May 27–29, 2022 at Funkhaus Wien Großer Sendesaal in Vienna, Austria
PUBLISHED
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra © 2021 Malek Jandali – Soul b Music
Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra © 2021 Malek Jandali – Soul b Music
CDR 90000 220
CONCERTO FOR CLARINET AND ORCHESTRA
As with Mozart writing clarinet works for Anton Stadler or Brahms for Richard Mühlfeld, Jandali wrote this work specifically for Anthony McGill, principal clarinetist of the New York Philharmonic, artistic director of Juiliard’s Music Advancement Program; and professor at both the Juilliard School and Curtis Institute. Says Jandali, ‘ Anthony for the first time on June 15, 2018, at the League of American Orchestras’ 73rd National Conference in Chicago and asked him if he would be interested in having a clarinet concerto written for him, and he said yes!” Written primarily in 2019 in New York City and Atlanta and completed in February 2021, the work is dedicated to McGill “in memory of all victims of injustice” and, like all of Jandali’s works, is infused with ancient themes from Jandali’s homeland as a means of preservation.
Reflecting on that dedication during the recording sessions in Vienna in May 2022, McGill said, “In the midst of the pain and the violence and injustice in the world al we are left with is the ability to pour our hearts and our souls into something more beautiful, into something more powerful, so it can communicate throughout all time and live on” He also reflected on how deeply the work affected him: “There are so many moments in this piece that really, really spoke to me deeply. And when I’m playing them, it makes me connected to something that maybe I wasn’t familiar with before. And that’s an amazing feeling to try to step inside the hearts of the Syrian people.”
Marin Alsop, who has worked with Jandali for many years on many different projects, emphasizes the moral thread that runs through Jandali’s music. “Malek composes in some ways very traditionally because he uses notation and techniques that the instrumentalists are familiar with; but like Bartók did, like Dvorák did, he uses his cultural folk music as a real underpinning for developing these themes, developing these ideas. But the most important part of the story always is the moral. My job is to find the moral to the story and get that across, and Malek’s music is very, very strong in its intentionality and its desire to really stand up for those who don’t have a voice.”
Melodic fragments emerge out of the mysterious orchestral introduction. colored by “ticking” xylophone interjections and rustling flutter-tonguing and tremolos, al coalescing into the solo clarinet’s entrance. A judicious pause brings on the first main theme, which comes from a wasla (cycle of instrumental and vocal pieces) in the Hiiaz Kar madam – a traditional muwashshah called “Zarani al Mahboub” (My beloved visited me), specifically in the Masmoudi rhythm. After a sprightly continuation, another pause brings on the second main theme- an ancient Syrian sama’i- also in the clarinet. McGill singles out this soft theme as particularly moving, saying “It has this rhythm that makes me feel as though I’ve stepped back in time, that l’m connecting into something much, much greater than myself.” The clarinet part becomes incredibly virtuosic, often landing on a flutter-tongued note representing the pleas of the victims of injustice. The ternary form comes full circle with a return to the first theme.
The finale grows out of the quiet of the preceding movement with steady periodic splashes
of struck suspended cymbals. The energetic first theme is based on an old Syrian bashraf in 4/4 meter, which soon becomes dazzlingly virtuosic for the clarinetist. The quieter second theme, also introduced by the clarinet, stems from a traditional Syrian wasla in the Bayati maqam, namely the muwashshah “Ya hilou al lama”(roughly “Oh sweet one and smiling”). Striking orchestral effects, ranging in pitch from extremely low to extremely high, lead to an acrobatic cadenza that shows of the clarinet in all its registers. The work concludes with a vigorous, festive dance for all that offers a suggestion of light and hope in the midst of darkness.
CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN AND ORCHESTRA
A concerto for a woman, played on a famous violin named for a woman, with an orchestra conducted by a woman – what better way to honor “all women who thrive with courage” Malek Jandali began composing his Violin Concerto in New York City in 2013, completing it in January 2014, originally with violinist Gidon Kremer in mind as the dedicatee. As the project took shape, however, with its emphasis on women who have transcended great obstacles, here dedicated it “To Rachel Barton Pine and to all women who thrive with courage.” Pine recorded it on the 1742 Giuseppe Guarneri “del Gesù” violin, previously known as the “ex-Bazzin'” but now as the “ex-Soldat” after violin virtuoso Marie Soldat of Johannes Brahms’s circle. On Brahms’s recommendation she had studied with Joseph Joachim and for a time was the only woman to play the Brahms Violin Concerto. To conduct, Jandali sought out Marin Alsop, one of today’s most successful women in the field, who has recorded most of his symphonic works. Here are just some of the women Jandali sought to honor in this music:
- Razan Zaitoneh, human rights lawyer, who went into hiding after being accused of being a foreign agent during the Syrian Revolution, now thought ot have been killed
- Rania Al-Abbasi, dentist and chess champion, who was arrested in 2013 for unknown reasons and has not been heard of since along with her husband and their six children
- Lina Droubi, Jandali’s mother, who with his father, Dr. Mamoun Jandali, was brutally beaten in Syria after Malek performed at a 2011 peaceful protest in front of the White House
In honor of these women and continuing his aim to preserve the cultural heritage of his homeland, Malek Jandali adds his Violin Concerto to his large body of work that incorporatesSyrian melodies and idioms into Western-inspired harmonies and forms. Jandali incorporates the oud (Arabic lute) in his symphonic scoring to infuse the work with the authentic sound and feeling of his beautiful but ravaged Syrian homeland. Says Rachel Barton Pine, “Just hearing that sound as I’m playing my music on this Western instrument in this Western symphony context was really very inspiring and helped me capture the flavor of what I was doing that much better.”
The first movement’s restless introduction, culminating in a shimmering cascade, sets the scene for the violin’s sentence, which draws on a lovely sama’i (instrumental piece) in the Zunkalah maqam (its specific mode) by Aleppo musician and scholar Ali al-Darwish (1884-1952). This and all the other sama’i Jandali uses in the work are in 10/8 meter, providing a unifying feature. When the violin heads up into the stratosphere on a high, held harmonic – with the oud making its first appearance- the horn enters with the second main theme, soon taken over by the violin. Jandali calls this his “Women’s Theme,” inspired by traditional Syrian folk music from the area along the Silk Road, which reached Palmyra and Aleppo. The “Women’s Theme” and others in both the Violin Concerto and the Clarinet Concerto were a source of comfort and healing for unjustly detained, peaceful Syrian activists and other women/mothers living in fear. Jandali’s use of them poignantly draws attention to the devastating loss of Syria’s ancient culture.
Jandali’s next integration, from an old Arabic bashraf, an instrumental form that would often precede a sama’i, provides metric/rhythmic contrast. One of the most dramatic include an extremely virtuosic and extended cadenza for the violin and the return of the oud in dialogue with the violin “remembering my homeland,” says Jandali, preparing us for the melancholic slow movement.
The Andante begins with an old Syrian sama’i characterized by an expressive leap then winding gracefully along its way. The solo violin reintroduces the theme, soon soaring to astral heights a sits lament becomes more and more ethereal. Jandali introduces four other sama’i in succession: an atmospheric oboe theme that stems from an old sama’i in the Hijaz maqam by Yousef Basha; another old sama’i as the solo violin’s response; yet another sama’i for the full orchestra; and finally a sama’i that forms the basis of a passage for violin with oud accompaniment. A grand climax leads to the return of the opening theme, and the elegiac movement concludes with mournful violin utterances joined by the elegant oud.
The solo violin launches the final movement in a livelier dance vein with another sama’i, after which the oud takes up a sama’i in the Kar Jghar maqam by Tatyos longa being a dance usually performed by women at the end of a muwashshah (poetic and musical form). After the violin soars high above the texture, the violas signal the entrance of the final folk tune, which the solo violin quietly presents. Jandali isa master at organically and seamlessly developing and varying his melodic materials immediately in ways that involve his entire orchestral palette- a case in point here has the flute in dialogue with the violin – but always with the overarching shape in mind. Thus, after a huge climax, a dramatic pause, and an orchestral “glimmer of hope,” the mood darkens, out of which the violin, with eerie poignancy, closes with a slow, expanded version of the movement’s opening theme.