Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Audio Sushi Track of the Day : Max Richter "Horizon Variations" from the Blue Notebooks... [1300701]

So often we anxiously anticipate certain releases only to find ourselves disappointed when they fail to match our expectations. Then there are less familiar ones for which our expectations are lower, yet we ultimately find ourselves floored when we discover how great they are. The Blue Notebooks is one such instance, and what a beautiful recording it is. Prior to its release, Richter studied piano with the late avant-garde Italian composer Luciano Berio and founded the classical group Piano Circus (an ensemble of six pianists that formed in 1989 to perform Steve Reichs Six Pianos) whose repertoire included works by Arvo Pärt and Philip Glass. Richters first recording, Memoryhouse, an ambitious fusion of modern classical music, electronics, and field recordings, was recorded with The BBC Philharmonic Orchestra. In addition, his resume includes contributions to The Future Sound of Londons Dead Cities and Roni Sizes In the Mode.

Released on Fat-Cats off-shoot label 130701, Richters second album, The Blue Notebooks, features a small core of musicians, specifically Richter on piano, violinists Louisa Fuller and Natalie Bonner, viola player John Mecalfe, and cellists Chris Worsey and Philip Sheppard. While piano and strings dominate, organ playing (on Iconography and Organum) and field recordings (environmental sounds like the crows at the end of Shadow Journal) also appear. Accompanied by typewriter sounds, actress Tilda Swinton (Orlando) reads excerpts from Frank Kafkas The Blue Octavo Notebooks and Polish author Czseslaw Miloszs Hymn Of The Pearl and Unattainable Earth. Her intermittent cameos add variety and contrast to the otherwise instrumental pieces (although the typewriter sounds arguably literalize the concept too greatly and might have been better omitted). Such details might suggest that a daunting experimental style dominates the album. On the contrary, the music is delectably melodic and eminently accessible. The eponymous opener sets the tone, its sparse piano chords suggestive of Satie. The strings that dominate the next piece, the melancholic On the Nature of Daylight, are by turns hymnal and poignant, with the lyrical qualities of the violin playing calling to mind Alexander Balanescus sweet sound. The elegiac mood is maintained throughout the eleven tracks but the consistency of mood is offset by the continual changes in instrumentation. Iconography, for example, features a childrens choir accompanied by organ whereas other pieces, like Vladimirs Blues, spotlight Richters understated piano playing. His style is minimalistic, with traces of Glass, Part, Bryars, and Nyman noticeably surfacing throughout. Vladimirs Blues borrows Glasss signature see-saw style, while the funereal The Trees highlights Nymanesque piano and violin parts. In fact, Iconography is textbook Holy Minimalism: austere and magisterial while also sparse and uncluttered. In spite of being derivative, The Blue Notebooks is a lovely and affecting work whose individual pieces cumulatively deepen its melancholy mood. Furthermore, at forty minutes its the perfect length, as its long enough to indelibly imprint itself upon ones memory yet not so long that its somber mood turns oppressive.

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