25 years on from the release of Officium, the groundbreaking alliance of Jan Garbarek and The Hilliard Ensemble, comes Remember me, my dear,
recorded during the final tour the group made in October 2014. The
program is emblematic of the range of repertoire the Norwegian
saxophonist and British vocal quartet explored together– from Pérotin,
Hildegard von Bingen, Guillaume le Rouge, Antoine Brumel to Komitas ,
Arvo Pärt and more. It could be said that the Hilliard/Garbarek
combination, in concert, transcended its source materials, with early
music, contemporary composition and improvisation interfused in the
responsive acoustics of sacred spaces. And this final album reminds us
that the unique Garbarek/Hilliard combination, and its unprecedented
exploration of sound, was consistently breathtaking.
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Jan Garbarek. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Jan Garbarek. Mostrar todas las entradas
viernes, 18 de octubre de 2019
viernes, 30 de junio de 2017
Kim Kashkashian / Jan Garbarek / Vangelis Christopoulos ELENI KARAINDROU Concert in Athens
A new programme offers new insights, particularly when participating
friends include guest soloists Jan Garbarek and Kim Kashkashian, both of
whom have made major contributions to the realization of Karaindrou’s
work in the past – Garbarek with his evocative playing of the themes for
The Beekeeper (reprised on the album Music for Films) and Karaindrou as the key musical protagonist of Ulysses’ Gaze. Over the years both artists have periodically returned to join Eleni for special events. Ulysses’ Gaze and Beekeeper themes are reprised here, along with music from other films of the late Theo Angelopoulos - Dust of Time, Eternity and a day, Landscape in the Mist and Journey to Cythera, all
of them revealing new facets as Kashkashian and Garbarek are featured
alongside Eleni’s team of soloists (with oboist Vangelis Christopoulos
especially striking). There is also much here that is new or heard on
CD for the first time including compositions originally written for
theatre productions directed by Antonis Antypas including Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? by Edward Albee, The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams as well as Jules Dassin’s production of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman.
The differing demands of the theatre music open up a new emotional
range for the soloists to explore. Eleni: “I sought to share with them
memories from past and more recent voyages in the worlds of theatre and
poetry. With Jan I plunged deep into the fascination and torment of
Arthur Miller, of Edward Albee and Tennessee Williams...” The album
opens and closes with Garbarek’s intensely brooding saxophone,
accompanied by Karaindrou’s piano and the string orchestra, playing the
“Requiem for Willie Loman” from Death of a Salesman. Meanwhile, “Kim’s sturdy and sensitive bow swept us on a journey to Laurä’s fragile world in The Glass Menagerie, having first traversed the Closed Roads
[one of several newly-arranged pieces of Karaindrou concert music] with
all the passion and unmatched internal nobility which distinguish her
work.” The scope of the music is further expanded with three charming
miniatures inspired by M. Karagatsis’s novel “Number Ten , and written
for the Greek television series of the same name. (ECM Records)
jueves, 5 de mayo de 2016
GIYA KANCHELI Caris Mere
Midday Prayers and Night Prayers complete the cycle somewhat cryptically entitled A Life without Christmas. They are meditations on snatches of biblical text, as is the solo viola piece Caris Mere (Georgian for “After the Wind”). Night Prayers was originally composed for string quartet (are the Kronos Quartet, to whom it was dedicated, getting round to a recording?), and to my ears the revised arrangement, superimposing soprano saxophone, doesn’t sound entirely convincing. This may come as a disappointment to those expecting Jan Garbarek to emulate his wonderful collaboration with the Hilliard Ensemble on “Officium” (ECM, 10/94).
In Midday Prayers Kancheli’s familiar polarized extremes of near-hibernation and manic activity are faithfully captured by performers and engineers. So too, unfortunately, is a certain amount of traffic noise, which rather breaks the spell in passages of extreme hush. Kim Kashkashian plays her short solo piece to the manner born.
Not a top priority issue, then, but one which makes a valuable addition to the discography of a distinctive voice in contemporary music.' (Gramophone)
jueves, 21 de mayo de 2015
KEITH JARRETT Arbour Zena
"I
consider this one of my most richly lyrical and consistently inspired
works," wrote Keith Jarrett of Arbour Zena. "Jan Garbarek's contribution
is irreplaceable and ecstatic." It is easy to agree that Arbour Zena is
one of Jarrett's most exceptional albums.
In some ways a follow-up to Jarrett's first recorded collaboration with
Jan Garbarek, the previous year's Luminessence for saxophone and string
orchestra, Arbour Zena adds Keith himself and bassist Charlie Haden to
the mix. Evocative writing for strings, beautiful playing by Jan, Keith,
and Haden at his most soulful, and a glowing panoramic production make
this 1975 recording one of the finest of ECM's first decade albums.
jueves, 9 de abril de 2015
Jan Garbarek / The Hilliard Ensemble OFFICIUM NOVUM
Now, after another decade of shared experiences, comes a third album from Garbarek/Hilliard, recorded, like its distinguished predecessors, in the Austrian monastery of St Gerold, with Manfred Eicher producing. Aptly titled, there is continuity in the music of “Officium Novum” and also some new departures. In ‘Occident/Orient’ spirit the album looks eastward, with Armenia as its vantage point and with the compositions and adaptations of Komitas as a central focus. The Hilliards have studied Komitas’s pieces, which draw upon both medieval sacred music and the bardic tradition of the Caucasus in the course of their visits to Armenia, and the modes of the music encourage some of Garbarek’s most impassioned playing. Works from many sources are drawn together as the musicians embark on their travels through time and over many lands. “Officium Novum” journeys from Yerevan to Byzantium, to Russia, France and Spain: all voyages embraced by the album’s dramaturgical flow, as the individual works are situated in a larger ‘compositional’ frame. (ECM Records)
martes, 6 de mayo de 2014
Kim Kashkashian TIGRAN MANSURIAN Monodia
Tigran Mansurian connects through his work to cultural and emotional
groundsprings that are important to him, particularly hints of
indigenous Armenian music. He also takes note of his current musical
environment, and this sense of inner and outer elements combining
informs both the music on these discs and the way it is played –
especially by fellow-Armenian Kim Kashkashian. … The Viola Concerto is
both moving and mercurial, sometimes grounded in faith or earth, at
other times clouded and troubled, even close to defiance… The
economically scored Violin Concerto is again rich in unaccompanied
material and Leonidas Kavakos seems to relish every note, especially in
the many higher-reaching passages. … “Lachrymae” for soprano saxophone
and viola finds Kashkashian and Garbarek intertwined in an embrace of
pitches and textures, each adapting to, or mirroring, the other’s
soundworld. “Confessing Faith” for viola and voices sets prayers by the
12th-century Armenian poet and musician St Nerses Shnorhali, its bold
incantations scaling peaks of expressive intensity, especially whenever
the countertenor David James enters. The viola’s warm and occasionally
abrasive contribution acts as a sort of humanising presence.
Monodia set me thinking along various fronts. Firstly, about the strength and innate soulfulness of Kashkashian’s musicianship, so profoundly suited to the viola. Then the creative excitement of combining unlikely instrumental timbres, and the question of music bridging different faiths, or at the very least different branches of the same faith. … Balancing and sound quality are immaculate.
(Rob Cowan, Gramophone)
Monodia set me thinking along various fronts. Firstly, about the strength and innate soulfulness of Kashkashian’s musicianship, so profoundly suited to the viola. Then the creative excitement of combining unlikely instrumental timbres, and the question of music bridging different faiths, or at the very least different branches of the same faith. … Balancing and sound quality are immaculate.
(Rob Cowan, Gramophone)
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