"Ross Bauer's interesting new bassoon concerto, Icons... managed to transcend those difficulties admirably -- especially in the first movement, the most clearly and directly argued
of the three. By interlacing dense orchestral episodes with sections in which the soloist's music was highlighted, Bauer crafted an ongoing dialogue of real substance."
Joshua Kosman, The San Francisco Chronicle
"The last movement moved like the furies. The quick-changing coloristic displays...brought out the idea of a giant fireworks display. Icons was impressive, first note to
last."
Marilyn Tucker, The Journal
"..wastes no time in exploiting the instrument's capacity for gruff lyricism and its timbral idiosyncrasies. Wilson lavished enormous dollops of color on her part and drew out lines with
tremendous reserves of breath."
Allan Ulrich, The San Francisco Examiner
"...subtle flashes of instrumental colors illuminating a busy but not heavy score...(the bassoon's) high range was brought out effectively by the 21 minute work, with the orchestra often
echoing or responding to her musical gestures. The slow movement's doleful, lonesome song for her lyrical bassoon was the most effective part of the work..."
Paul Hertelendy, The San Jose Mercury-News
"This is a MAJOR work for bassoon and orchestra. It was commissioned by the Berkeley Symphony, conducted by Kent Nagano, and written as a showpiece for the principal bassoonist Carla Wilson. Bauer's style is quite international -- somewhat reminiscent of the works of Schoenberg and Berg, but with an American love of percussion and percussive sounds in the manner of Edgard Varese. One of its best qualities is how the composer has skillfully composed and orchestrated the work, which is for LARGE orchestra, but scored in such a way that the bassoon can still be heard over the texture. Bravo to Ross Bauer for providing us with this major solo work for the bassoon."
The Double Reed, Journal of the International Double Reed Society
Ritual Fragments:
"Soprano Susan Narucki's distinctive timbre and penetrating lyricism
were vital to the performance of Bauer's Ritual Fragments (1995),
which uses texts from an anthology of Native American songs and
poems translated and edited by William Brandon. Filled with nature
imagery, the texts are grouped around cycles of day and night and of the
seasons. A greatly varied landscape of moods and textures was
evoked by the accompanying six instruments, supporting and
intensifying Bauer's expressive vocal writing. The music was
continuous, welded into an unbroken chain of nine songs by a series of
imaginative and vibrantly scored instrumental interludes.
Ritual Fragments was a beautiful and original work, heard in a
performance imbued with poetic feeling and commitment."
Jules Langert, San Francisco Classical Voice
"Ross Bauer's "Ritual Fragments", played at the end of the concert, used the instrumentation...with imagination and poetry."
Paul Griffiths, The New York Times
"....most interesting in the cycle were the deftness and efficiency with which Bauer established a specific character for each song. These ranged from the slow-moving sensuousness of "The
Rock," set to an Omaha text, or the bouncing quality of a Quechuan fragment about a water bug, to the static nobility of an excerpt from the Navajo "Night Chant.".....Narucki lavished
the part with such artistry that it proved gripping."
Joshua Kosman, The San Francisco Chronicle
Octet:
"Ensembles composed of clarinet, bassoon, horn and strings...are blessed with some of the great chamber music masterworks (Schubert Octet, Beethoven Septet) and many other fine compositions, including some excellent 20th century works. However, I rarely encounter a concert (or even a new recording) by such a group. If and when I do, I hope that the Ross Bauer Octet will be on it.
The piece has the same instrumentation as the Schubert Octet. It is dedicated to the composer's wife, bassoonist Carla Wilson. As such, it features the bassoon, but the composer says that it is "by no means a bassoon concertino." Most of the important bassoon passages contain long, lyrical lines. It begins quietly with a solo bassoon entrance. For the most part it builds in speed and intensity until the final section, when the opening material returns, this time even more serenely. It ends very quietly with long sustained chords. The score is well marked, revealing the skill of the composer's instrumental handling and his interest in timbre and balance."
The Double Reed, Journal of the International Double Reed Society
Tributaries
"Lines of musical conversation cross over, smartly, in Ross Bauer's Tributaries, for cello, piano and percussion. Feisty, interactive writing is key -- one musician finishes
another's sentence, and all exude a seductive restlessness beneath the neatly structured surface."
Josef Woodard, the Los Angeles Times
Highly Rubbery for solo bass clarinet
"Its main action was in the shaping of a kind of duet between the high and low registers of the instrument. Lyrical, melodic writing in the upper range was complemented by a low-note
punctuation of the line that added depth and rhythmic intensity. Later, there was a slow section with longer sustained notes plus added tremolos that created an effect of static oscillation. The
finale was extremely agitated, with huge leaps and register changes taken at great speed, leading to a brilliant hurtling close. Peter Josheff gave a truly dazzling account of this demanding and
difficult piece, composed especially for him."
Jules Langert, the San Francisco Classical Voice
Romanza:
"Ross Bauer's intriguing "Romanza," commissioned by the Symphony and written specifically for Terrie Baune, showed ingenious use of orchestral color. By grouping disparate
instruments, and overlapping sections of music, Bauer created unusual tones and eerie shimmers."
Phyllis Roseblum, Santa Cruz Sentinel
Aplomb:
"...rhapsodic enough as well but always in a high-octane, let's-move-it way. It's final movement, "Inward," was exactly and very impressively that. In sum, Ross Bauer knew
what he wanted to say and exactly how to say it. And the admirable Cyrus Stevens knew exactly how to play it."
Richard Buell, The Boston Globe
"...strong emotional gestures behind the compositional shaping. There was a rhapsodic quality of the kind that violinists easily take to, along with a sense that event was leading to event in a
necessary, cogent fashion. To these ears, the sense of inevitability in the workmanship has a curious and attractive mysteriousness in it. That may be a way of saying that your reviewer descried real
substance in it, the unfakable genuine article, and would like to hear it again."
Richard Buell, The Boston Globe
Concerto for Piano and Chamber Orchestra:
"The piece begins with a long, ruminative, generative cadenza for solo piano that set the tone for the most interesting things that followed, notably a dark, moody slow movement of
condiderable atmosphere - and formal interest. The rest of the piece continually sprang elegant surprises..."
Richard Dyer, The Boston Globe
Neon for Orchestra:
"...as brightly colored as one might imagine from its title."
Marilyn Tucker, The San Francisco Chronicle
"...showed a complex organization...yet it was very easy to listen to, with its sonic brilliance and soothing textures. The busy piece was like a platter with a lot of good seasonings. The work
was an ebullient curtain-raiser, with many solos and uncommon sounds in the bass clarinet, tuba, piccolo and other exotica."
Paul Hertelendy, San Jose Mercury News
"Vigor and animation marked Ross Bauer's short overture, Neon, as light explosive puffs in the strings punctuated glistening exchanges between woodwinds."
Phyllis Rosenblum, The Santa Cruz Sentinel
Oda al Olor de la Lena, for Baritone and three players:
"...it evokes the intense feeling of the poem...There is an appealing instrumental epilogue. Paul Hillier sang it well." William Glackin, Sacramento Bee
"...an impressive world premiere...exceptionally well written. It uses the low range of the alto flute, muted cello, the soft tones of a vibraphone and marimba to accompany the Baritone voice.
It has a sentimental, moody atmosphere...excellent music."
Clark Mitze, radio review KXJZ, Sacramento
Anaphora for solo flute, string trio and piano:
"...obviously finely written, especially for its extensively ranging flute part...and the craft in its treatment of the supporting string trio and piano."
Robert Commanday, San Francisco Chronicle
"...should surprise anybody who thinks contemporary music can't sing or furnish lovely ensemble sounds. Focused on the expressive solo flute and alto flute...in lyric lines that rose from
quiet beginnings, it gives lyric phrases to the others, too, before turning to the quick, busy figures of the middle section. The quiet finish is beautifully scored, with long lines for the flute and
a nice ear for the blend underneath."
William Glackin, Sacramento Bee
Tonarten for solo piano:
"...an aptitude both for extrovert gestures in the post-twelve tone, Stockhausen-influenced manner of piano writing and for delicate varied effects of color. The structure was weighty and
real: it was possible to follow the argument as though one were reading a book. The piece stays in the memory as a thing distinctly achieved, a thing added to the world."
Paul Driver, The Boston Globe
Chimera:
"...ably held the center of the concert's first half...it proved one of those increasingly rare contemporary compositions that actually headed -- and got -- somewhere."
Timothy Pfaff, The San Francisco Examiner
"Ross Bauer, particularly, demonstrated with his Chimera that an atonal piece can be appealing to tonally conditioned ears as well as interesting."
William Glackin, The Sacramento Bee
Along The Way:
"The scoring is expert and idiomatic; there are condensed, notely passages that have a bracing intensity and beauty."
Anthony Tommasini, The Boston Globe
Concertino for Chamber Orchestra:
"...an impressive piece of music."
David Brokken, The Minnesota Daily
"...offers the musicians a rewarding task..."
Ernest Vermeulen, NRC Handelsblad (Amsterdam)
Chin Music:
"...the writing is skillful, and the voice sure."
Josiah Fisk, The Boston Herald