Hans Otte, who was born in 1926 and died in 2007, was musical 
                director of Radio Bremen between 1959 and 1984. He was a Hindemith 
                pupil and a fine pianist in his own right. The Book of Hours – 
                Stundenbuch – had a relatively long eight-year gestation and bears 
                the laconic, but detailed subtitle “forty-eight pieces for piano 
                for two hands, in two volumes”.
                
              
Almost all the movements 
                are refined and refractive and only one exceeds two and three 
                quarter minutes in length. Some indeed last no more than forty 
                seconds. Their concentration doesn’t imply  terseness or superficiality. 
                But they do have the status of arrested time, a profoundly involving 
                sense of spiritual density despite their brevity. 
                
Otte employs the idea of the medieval Book 
                  of Hours – “of monastic life – of pilgrimage – of poverty and 
                  death” – in a way that is explicitly studied, meditative and 
                  spiritual. With the amazingly clear and warm recorded sound 
                  and the excellent embracing acoustic, Roger Woodward’s Bösendorfer sings with luminous beauty.
                
With so much that 
                  is refined and still, it’s hard to pick moments that are more 
                  descriptive than others or that point to sources of inspiration 
                  other than those already outlined. But there are pointers; Feldman 
                  is perhaps an influence, Cage too. In the fourth piece of Book 
                  I one can feel questing hints of Bartók. The circular, drifting 
                  patterns of No.8 have a gravitational allure independent of 
                  any putative influence. The stillness of No.11 carries its own 
                  lucid charge. Elsewhere we can hear a sort of very stripped 
                  down Debussy – an influence that Otte might have assimilated 
                  anyway, but the fact that he studied with Gieseking is doubly 
                  suggestive.
                
Throughout, despite 
                  those brief eruptive moments that do exist, we feel a constant 
                  skein of stillness and purity; the second piece from Book III 
                  is an example of the more textually angular writing that provides 
                  contrast in the Stundenbuch. In the main though the shifting 
                  patterns, constant yet changeable as cumulus, affords the greatest 
                  sensual and musical satisfaction. Whether glittering in the 
                  treble infused writing of No.43 or controlling the stasis of 
                  No.39 Woodward proves himself, as one has come to expect, a 
                  subtle explorer of touch and refined poetry.
                
Celestial Harmonies’ 
                  booklet might appear typographically austere but the composer’s 
                  printed aphorisms better reveal the concentrated richness evoked 
                  in his music.
                 
              
Jonathan 
                Woolf