
I go slowly hence from the world
Into a domain beyond all distance,
Into a domain beyond all distance,
Gidon Kremer’s violin seems to arise from a shadow within a shadow.
Soon joined by flute, which acts like a hooded guide through the
wilderness, Kremer flirts with his surroundings. The orchestra responds
provocatively to these agitations, only to blend back into the woodwork
from which its sounds are born. As strings wander toward the horizon,
every bowed step seems only to bring them closer to me, as if I were but
a projection of a faraway self.
And what I was and am and shall remain
Goes with me hasteless and forbearing
Into a country ’til yet untrod
Goes with me hasteless and forbearing
Into a country ’til yet untrod
The wind continues its gentle flight, weaving through orchestral
punctuations like a suture through flesh. These satoric bursts never
last. Their clarity is brief, their catharsis even briefer. Kremer
brings a raw, rustic tone, and with it a certain terrestrial quality to
this otherwise stratospheric music. Unfamiliar skies and the mud-stained
roads beneath them temper any possible thrill of discovery. And yet,
the closer I walk to death, the brighter my surroundings seem to become.
I go slowly hence from time
Into a future beyond the stars,
Into a future beyond the stars,
Kremer’s lilting highs mesh beautifully with Maacha Deubner’s own as
both pull the orchestra to a high summit. I leap without hesitation,
floating ever so gently back to solid ground. Deubner seems to sing from
somewhere not of this world. Her voice becomes a memory, something
heard when I let down my mental guard. Kremer gets an equally magical
sound from his instrument, leading the orchestra with utter
determination.
And what I was and am and ever shall remain
Goes with me hasteless and forbearing,
Goes with me hasteless and forbearing,
Deubner sets aloft a high-pitched violin before oboe and orchestra
spin their own guiding light out of ether. Familiar material works its
way into my mental window: a rare comfort in these tattered vestiges,
far enough removed from Kancheli’s motivic staples while also weeping in
their shadows. I can only sit on the edge of music like this, never
knowing whether to lie back or lean forward. And so I am resigned to the
margin, left to wander
As though I’d not, or scarcely, ever been.
(ECM Reviews)
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