
The music of English composer Gavin Bryars has long managed the distinction of being both “accessible and defiantly personal” (
The New York Times).
A deep yet unsentimental emotional resonance and a patient,
contemplative view of time – whether relating to harmonic rhythm or
human experience – are complementary characteristics that run through
his instrumental, vocal and theatrical catalog like a red thread, the
composer inspired by disparate spirits from Wagner and Satie to Cage and
Silvestrov. The ECM New Series released multiple recordings of Bryars’
music in the 1980s and early ’90s, including the classic albums
After the Requiem and
Vita Nova. The first full ECM album from Bryars in decades is
The Fifth Century,
which includes the seven-part title work: a slowly evolving – yet
immediately involving – setting of words by 17th-century English mystic
Thomas Traherne, performed by the mixed choir of The Crossing with
saxophone quartet PRISM. The album also features
Two Love Songs, luminous a cappella settings of Petrarch for the women of The Crossing.
(ECM Records)
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