
Ostensibly a response to watching a Palestinian father and son fall prey to crossfire on the Gaza Strip,
mercy
journeys beyond grieving or anger to a meditative state that hints at
both but submits to neither. The style is coolly contrapuntal: the
opening “braid” unfolds like a slow vocal fugue then grows more agitated
around the twominute mark as the piano enters and a woman protests
across the musical line. Or ist it protest? More voices join in and the
mellifluous accompaniment helps turn the tables for what sounds more
like celebration. This energetic ambiguity is typical of Monk. …
mercy appears
to reflect elements of Reich-style minimalism, Satie-style economy,
early vocal music and rustic harmonic twists typical of Bartók, Janáĉek,
Enescu and the like. The modest resources used – a handful of voices,
clarinets, tuned percussion, synthesiser, melodica, violin, viola – meld
or converse unpremeditated, much as they would in a folk group.
mercy is an outgrowth both of Monk’s maturity and the maturing musical trends
that surround her. Like its subject, it is very much of our time. I was
very taken with it.
(Rob Cowan / Gramophone)
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