Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Katie Geissinger. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Katie Geissinger. Mostrar todas las entradas
jueves, 22 de junio de 2017
MEREDITH MONK Impermanence
ATLAS an opera in three parts by MEREDITH MONK
So, how are we to approach this work in its CD form? A parallel which comes to mind is listening to a conventional opera sung in a tongue which one doesn't understand, and for which one has neither libretto nor synopsis. Or, perhaps even more aptly, a ballet where one is similarly strapped for a story-line and unable to see the dancers. Several layers of meaning are left unilluminated but we are left with the music itself.
What is encouraging about Monk's work here is that, as opposed to some of her drier exercises from the past, it does have a feeling of continuity and of succession: each section grows from the previous one, and there is a sense of thematic and motivic growth (albeit not along formal lines) which marks it out from the more militant miniaturist compositions. Monk is also interested in creating music which is pleasant to listen to and which paints pictures, even to the listener with no idea of the story-line. There is a large cast of singers, but it is rare for more than four characters to be singing simultaneously, and more often Monk uses voices in quick succession, each working with different musical material, to build up her overall picture.
The accompaniment is supplied by just ten instruments, five of these being strings. It is very sensitively attuned to the vocalisation, and also contributes some purely musical interludes of great charm. The performance level is very high, the dedication is evident at every turn: as a substitute for being there, this set will do nicely. But I'd love to see a production mounted in this country; or perhaps ECM could release a video version?' (kshadwick / Gramophone)
martes, 20 de junio de 2017
MEREDITH MONK Mercy
MEREDITH MONK Volcano Songs
Like their referent, Monk’s Volcano Songs (1993-94) reveal
the earth’s hidden forces, at once violent and graceful, as they are
embodied in the human form. Fissures in the great cosmic wheel release
their breath in chant, foregoing the detriment of words in search of
untinctured expression. Therein lies the great irony of this music, and
of the earthly condition that engenders its existence: namely, that in
order to express detachment one must hold steadfastly to the ephemeral
utterance as a point of departure. Hence the uncanny splitting of the self we find between Monk and Katie Geissinger in the duet portions of the Volcano cycle (for indeed, were I unaware of the album’s personnel, I might have thought that Monk was overdubbing herself).
Compared to Monk’s six previous ECM New Series efforts, Volcano Songs
is perhaps the most intimately recorded. Microphones seem fully
embedded in these voices, subtly processed for reverberant effect.
Ultimately, I feel that one gets out of this music only what one is
willing to lay at its feet. It is both the beauty and the tragedy of the
human voice: in pulling at the threads of our emotions, we must undo
one thing to communicate another, so that by the end we have forgotten
where we started, inhaling an idea that may very well outlive us. And
just as a volcano spews forth its scalding breath into the atmosphere,
so too must we eventually exhale, licking the fragile layer that
separates our survival ever so delicately from the blank space beyond.
The magic of Monk’s music is that it offers a glimpse of that other
side, in terms that we can relate to. (ECM Reviews)
sábado, 3 de diciembre de 2016
MEREDITH MONK On Behalf Of Nature
With her latest, multivalent ECM New Series album, Meredith aimed to address ecology and climate change, she says: "Believing that music speaks more directly than words, I worked to make a piece with a fluid, perceptual field that could expand awareness of what we are in danger of losing. On Behalf of Nature is a meditation on our intimate connection to nature, its inner structures, the fragility of its ecology and our interdependence." Voices and instruments have equal weight: sometimes each is heard alone; sometimes they are blended to form a new, mysterious sound; sometimes they are combined to create intricate, layered, yet transparent sonic landscapes.
lunes, 2 de junio de 2014
Nico Muhly / Owen Pallett / Bryce Dessner / Shara Worden DAVID LANG Death Speaks
Death is present in so many of Schubert's lieder, and those appearances provide the starting point for the five songs that make up David Lang's Death Speaks. Lang went through the 600-plus texts that Schubert set, extracting all the lines that are either attributed explicitly to death, or to characters representing him, translating them "roughly" into English and creating lovesong-like lyrics. The settings are wonderfully spare and insistent, with accompaniments from guitar, piano and violin. Shara Worden, lead singer of My Brightest Diamond, is the vocalist, recorded in a close perspective, while the other work on the disc, Depart, offers a very different kind meditation on death. It was commissioned to be played in a French morgue, a peaceful setting in which the bereaved could see their loved ones for the last time. A sequence of slowly changing drones for wordless women's voices and cello, makes the perfect foil for Lang's naggingly memorable songs. (Andrew Clements / The Guardian)
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