
Ed Martin's Ravello Records debut Journeys could not be more aptly
titled. This album of highly original piano compositions invites the
listener on a voyage through mysterious realms where the limits of the
sensual and the intuitive dissolve – a journey that is at times epic,
and at other times epically quiet. The album commences with Three Pieces
for Piano (2006), a modernist mélange whose gamut ranges from dissonant
serenity to rhythmic agitation. They're perfectly, intimately rendered
by pianist Jeri-Mae G. Astolfi, who performs the entirety of Journeys
with great clarity, structural insight and precision, never losing touch
with the primal, emotional appeal of the compositions. Swirling Sky
(2014), dedicated to the pianist, displays the collaboration between the
performer and the composer at its most fruitful. Martin has sculpted
and captured the peculiar sensation of looking at clouds in the sky with
seeming effortlessness; Astolfi performs them with a paradox
combination of lightness and depth that is most appropriate. The album's
namesake and centerpiece, however, is the recent,
eleven-piece piano cycle Journey, composed in 2015-2017. In more traditionalist terms, one
might call this "variations on a theme" – and one would fall
horrendously short, considering the vast artistic and psychological
scope of the work. The starting point, Soul, whose main idea centers
around a humble minor third, is subsequently transformed in the most
diverse of ways: The motive appears, recognizable but ever-changing, in
deep sorrow in Lament, desperate to the brink of madness in Vexed,
collected in Revelation, and cheerfully delusional in Manic. Eventually,
a new thought – Conviction – leads to a Metamorphosis and ultimately
culminates in the final Transcend, the cycle's (and album's) musical
catharsis.
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