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 CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
                            
             
          
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            Path  
              Dmitri YANOV-YANOVSKY (b.1963) 
               
              Chang Music IV Movts 1 and 2 [14:29]  
              Arvo PÄRT (b.1935)  
              Von Angesicht zu Angesicht [3:31]; Summa, version for guitar 
              quartet [5:54]  
              Polina MEDYULYANOVA (b.1974) 
               
              Ewige Ruhe [4:11]  
              Aleksandra VREBALOV (b.1970) 
               
              The Spell III for Violin and Live Electronics [6:39]  
              John TAVENER (b.1944) 
               
              Epistle of Love [10:15]; Sámaveda [9:10]  
              Zarub NADEREJSHVILI (b.1957) 
               
              String Quartet no.1 movt.3 [10:28]  
                
              The Carducci Quartet, Patricia Rozario, Eamonn Dougan, Joachim Roewer, 
              Malachy Robinson, Deirdre O’Leary. Elizabeth Cooney assisted by 
              Tommaso Perego, Doreen Curran, The Dublin Guitar Quartet, Michael 
              McHale, Vourneen Ryan and Ranjana Ghatak  
              rec. St. Michael's Highgate, St. Paul's Deptford, Grouse Lodge Studios, 
              Co. Westmeath, Potton Hall, Suffolk, 2010. DDD. Stereo.  
                
              LOUTH CONTEMPORARY MUSIC SOCIETY LCMS1001 [65:33]   
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                Multiple allusions and meanings are suggested by the title 
                  of this new LCMS release. In one sense, the idea of a path, 
                  or of progress in a given direction is at odds with the relative 
                  stasis of much the music. It is apt in other ways though, in 
                  particular in the choice of composers for the project. Two top-selling, 
                  senior names from the first generation of religious minimalism 
                  are represented: Arvo Pärt and John Tavener. The rest of the 
                  music is by younger composers, suggesting perhaps a path towards 
                  the future of this kind of music. The term 'path' could also 
                  refer to the Silk Road, for much of this music either originates 
                  from, or alludes directly to, cultures of central Asia.  
                   
                  Yanov-Yanovsky's 'Chang Music IV' was commissioned by the Kronos 
                  Quartet, and its place at the start of this programme sets the 
                  tone of the disc, a tone very similar to that of many Kronos 
                  releases. It evokes the chang, a string instrument of Uzbekistan 
                  that apparently plays continuous glissandos. Yanov-Yanovsky 
                  is himself Uzbek, although that doesn't necessarily make him 
                  immune from charges of orientalism when writing to an American 
                  commission. Whatever the ethnography here, and elsewhere on 
                  the disc, the result is very enjoyable. It is tranquil, but 
                  there is always a slight edge to the timbre.  
                   
                  That edge is a recurring feature in the following works. Most 
                  are calm, but not so eventless as to be ambient. The programme 
                  strikes an impressive balance between spiritual directness and 
                  intellectual engagement. The variety of approaches from the 
                  various composers means that that balance is reconfigured and 
                  re-evaluated with almost every work.  
                   
                  The programme works forwards and backwards from Yanovsky, at 
                  least in terms of the ages of the composers. The contributions 
                  from Pärt and Tavener, while they may help the disc to sell, 
                  are not the most interesting works on offer. Pärt's arrangement 
                  of (the already oft-arranged) 'Summa' for guitar quartet is 
                  a canny reworking, the addition of the plucked strings to the 
                  sustained chords giving just enough added interest to justify 
                  it. His 'Von Angesicht zu Angesicht' seems to recall the composer's 
                  avant-garde days, interspersing as it does sustained vocal textures 
                  with almost pointillist interjections from the clarinet and 
                  viola.  
                   
                  John Tavener has many followers, who seem curiously accepting 
                  of his various eccentricities, but 'Epistle of Love' may stretch 
                  even their patience. It is a song-cycle for soprano and piano, 
                  although you could easily mistake the accompaniment for a harp. 
                  It is written in a sort of pseudo-medieval style, which I have 
                  to say, does nothing for me. His 'Sámaveda' is slightly more 
                  engaging, including as it does a tampura, which is an Indian 
                  drone instrument. The interaction a composer can have with an 
                  instrument that only plays a single note is always going to 
                  be limited, but it is an provocative touch.  
                   
                  Much, much more interesting, however, are the three works by 
                  the unknown composers, or at least unknown to me. Polina Medyulyanova 
                  is another Uzbek, but she is more comfortable than Yanovsky 
                  with Western idioms. Her work 'Ewige Ruhe' is for soprano, clarinet 
                  and string quartet, and stylistically seems to transcend any 
                  sense of location. Religious minimalism from Eastern Europe 
                  has clearly had an influence, but there are also French and 
                  German flavours here, and all woven up in the simplest of textures. 
                  Vrebalov's 'The Spell III' for violin and live electronics is 
                  that rarest of works, an electro-acoustic piece that makes subtle 
                  use of the electronic component. The sound of the violin is 
                  manipulated to create almost vocal background sounds, chants 
                  and cries. Nadarejshvili's String Quartet no.1, of which only 
                  third movement is presented, builds clouds of string textures 
                  around themes taken from Georgian chant. It is an effective 
                  device, and all the more so for the fact that there is always 
                  some definition to the sound. Like all the works on the disc, 
                  its ambience is tempered by the always apparent presence of 
                  the defined instruments, and by articulations that pinpoint 
                  the individual notes in the texture.  
                   
                  The term 'religious minimalism' is clearly becoming obsolete 
                  as the composers from the East who specialise in spiritual music 
                  increasingly broaden their horizons. The younger composers showcased 
                  here are not of a generation who were defined, artistically 
                  speaking, through explicit opposition to Soviet aesthetic ideology. 
                  The result seems to be music that engages with a wider cultural 
                  context, yet has the same intensity of feeling and emotional 
                  focus.  
                   
                  The performances and recordings here are excellent, and well 
                  up to the standards set by the previous LCMS release A 
                  Place Between. Unlike that earlier recording, this 
                  one was made in four different locations, not all of them churches, 
                  yet a consistently ambient acoustic is maintained throughout. 
                  Of the performers, soprano Patricia Rozario deserves special 
                  mention, as does the Carducci Quartet, who prove impressively 
                  adept at moving between the styles of the various composers. 
                  The packaging design is adventurous, more so than the big labels 
                  dare these days, or perhaps more so than the big labels are 
                  prepared to pay for. Happily, LCMS is the kind of organisation 
                  that is prepared to stand out from the crowd. In terms of programming, 
                  that's the real strength of this disc. I'm sure many people 
                  will buy it to hear the Tavener and Pärt, but I suspect they 
                  will find themselves enjoying the works of the younger composers 
                  more.  
                     
                  Gavin Dixon 
                                                                  
                  
                  
               
             
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