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reviews of fred
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Sunday, July 31, 2005 |
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By Joshua Kosman San Francisco Chronicle original link
FRED: MUSIC OF FREDERIC RZEWSKI
It would be hard to think of a more congenial pairing of composer and
performer than Frederic Rzewski and the dynamic young new-music sextet
Eighth Blackbird. Like the ensemble's performances, Rzewski's work is
vividly theatrical -- his piano music, for example, calls for reciting,
whistling, banging on the keyboard lid and so on -- and there's a visceral
excitement to his music that remains constant even as it ranges from
tender melodic writing to the most extreme dissonances. All of those
features inform the "Pocket Symphony," a six-movement dazzler
that Rzewski
wrote in 2000 for the group and that serves as the headline attraction
of
this mostly knockout disc. The music covers all kinds of moods and
approaches, from dreamy surrealism to caffeinated unison melodies, and
the
members of Eighth Blackbird deliver it all with their trademark panache.
Just as thrilling is "Les Moutons de Panurge, " a little-known
masterpiece
from 1969 built out of a single melody that repeats and returns in
ever-deepening iterations like waves hitting a shore. The disappointment
comes at the end, with "Coming Together," Rzewski's turbulent,
provocative
setting of a letter from Attica inmate Sam Melville. This is one of the
great pieces of political art in the new-music repertoire, and the
group's placid, adenoidal rendition turns it into a self-help mantra.
Copyright © 2005 San
Francisco Chronicle |
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