On ‘Henosis’ the Dutch composer continues his minimalist and at times
romantic style of writing, but this time his piano is complemented by a
diverse range of other instruments and players. It sets off where his
sophomore album Prehension left us, the warm intimate sound of the
Schimmel piano Beving inherited from his grandmother. But the
compositional language chosen is different from his previous work. As if
gently inviting one on a cosmic adventure, it is the commencement of an
epic journey into the unknown. What follows is a deep listening
experience in which the piano, although sometimes completely absent, is
the familiar voice that guides the listener on its way into oblivion.
Beving draws his inspiration from man’s relationship to reality.
His debut album ‘Solipsism’ investigates the self and how it is
related to the other by trying to show we have a shared understanding of
what it is to be human, e.g. manifested in our response to a thing of
beauty.
For ‘Prehension’ Beving describes realizing he had zoomed out from
the individual level to the level of the collective. Borrowing his album
title from Alfred North Whitehead who portrays reality as an organism
in which man is held responsible for the unfolding of fragments of
reality every fraction of a second.
‘Henosis’ is the last step in which Beving, this time intentionally,
zoomed out even further resulting in a cosmological journey in search of
the fundament of ultimate reality and emptiness of the mind.
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