In this wonderful collection of works for two guitars by a group of
composers hailing from many spots on the globe, Duo Noire provides a
compelling snapshot of the range of expression in contemporary chamber
music for the instrument. Featuring music by Clarice Assad, Mary
Kouyoumdijan, Courtney Bryan, Golfam Khayam, Gity Razaz and Gabriella
Smith, the duo virtuosically presents a program that is aesthetically
diverse, but focused around the values of narrative shape and expressive
transparency.
“Night Triptych” opens with Clarice Assad’s (of the famed Assad guitar family) Hocus Pocus, a
dynamic work blending the rhythmic intensity and rich harmonic color of
the music from her native Brasil with an encyclopedic understanding of
the timbral possibilities on the instrument. Percussive effects and
brilliant arpeggios mark the opening movement, and a brooding second
movement leads into a driving finale. Mary Kouyoumdjian’s Byblos is
inspired by the ancient Lebanese city of the same name, and involves an
accompanying electronic track that subtly deconstructs a Mediterranean
traditional dance in hazy washes of sound. The guitar writing at times
evokes the figurations of its regional cousin, the oud, and the
relationship between live performers and the atmospheric backing track
frames the push and pull between past and present in Kouyoumdjian’s
engagement with this city that has seen multiple civilizations come and
go. With its title, Courtney Bryan’s Soli Deo Gloria signals
its alignment with centuries of work dedicated to the glory of a higher
being and purpose. The composition’s journey is framed in terms of
Bryan’s relationship to the stages of prayer — Contemplative, Unsettled
and Searching, Questioning and Hoping, a Prayer, Pursuing, Realization,
Acceptance. Bryan’s incorporation of jazz and gospel elements is subtle,
integrated elegantly into her evolving compositional argument. Iranian
composer Golfam Khayam’s title work is in three movements,
“Improvisatory”, “Quasi Furioso”, and “Rubato, Amoroso, Molto
Cantabile.” As with Kouyoumdjian’s work, we hear echoes of the oud and
Middle Eastern music in fleet, ornamental slurred passages and pointed
grace notes. But despite the hints at a geographically specific
orientation, overall Khayam’s work comes from a place of universal
contemplation, a style consistent to those familiar with ECM, the
revered German label on which she has been featured. Also of Iranian
heritage, Gity Razaz’s work is more squarely within the modernist
compositional tradition, and her Four Haikus are four tightly
crafted pieces, reminiscent in language and approach to the great late
20th century repertoire for guitar commissioned by Julian Bream. These
works give the listener a chance to hear Duo Noire’s cultivated ensemble blend, well considered interpretative approach, and particularly in the
second and final movements, rhythmic vibrancy. Gabriella Smith’s Loop the Fractal Hold of Rain engages with popular music more overtly than the other music on the recording, opening with an ostinato
figure articulated with a slide that gives way to an insistent groove
with engaging polyrhythmic counterpoint in harmonics. Shades of
bluegrass and slide guitar inflect the minimalist structure. (D. Lippel)
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario