This disc shows some of Gavin Bryars’ compositions for piano. 
                  The first two works are for solo piano, and the third is for 
                  piano, choir and orchestra. 
                  
                  After Handel’s Vesper, a 1995 work, is played here on 
                  piano, though it was written for harpsichord. There is some 
                  beautiful, subtle music at the beginning of this piece, with 
                  light melodic touches and a great deal of space, which would 
                  sound odd on the harpsichord with its quicker decay. The work 
                  has a number of discrete sections, some that recall a minimalist 
                  style, and others that hark back to the baroque with a fair 
                  amount of ornamentation. At times this piece almost sounds like 
                  an improvisation; the melodic material is simple and undeveloped, 
                  almost uninteresting. 
                  
                  Ramble on Cortona was Bryars’ first composition for piano, 
                  oddly enough, and was composed in 2010. Bryars, for some reason, 
                  has never written for this instrument before, and this piece 
                  is based on some themes from a recent vocal work of his, Laude, 
                  which is, in turn, based on some 13th century manuscripts discovered 
                  in Cortona, Italy. It is slow and melancholic, at first, featuring 
                  a simple right-hand melody over arpeggiated chords played with 
                  the left hand in a high register. The work shifts to other forms 
                  that all suggest simple song-like melodies at the high end of 
                  the scale, with varied accompaniments by the left hand. There 
                  are sections that are more minimalist, others more impressionist, 
                  but the work lacks any overall cohesion. 
                  
                  The Piano Concerto, The Solway Canal, is a large-scale 
                  piece for piano, choir and orchestra. The solo piano never takes 
                  on the role of soloist here, but rather, as the liner-notes 
                  say “takes on the unexpected rôle of a guide instead, soberly 
                  leading the orchestra and the choir into new territories of 
                  colour.” Early on, the choir comes in singing words from the 
                  Scottish poet Edwin Morgan, with the music becoming layered: 
                  the piano as one layer, the orchestra another, and the choir 
                  above them. There is no solo-tutti structure in this work, but 
                  rather a flowing combination of the three. The work starts out 
                  with a slow, one could say “flowing” tempo, and slowly increases 
                  in speed after the first section with the choir. In this part, 
                  the interplay between the piano and orchestra is very attractive, 
                  yet unfulfilling; the music seems to have no clear direction. 
                  A long section for piano and orchestra goes by, then the choir 
                  returns, with a more romantic background. The piano plays constantly 
                  here, driving a rhythm that conflicts with the slow chanting 
                  of the choir. The music then becomes a bit confused - the liner-notes 
                  suggest that this is somehow “reminiscent of works by Charles 
                  Ives, or perhaps even Iannis Xenakis” - around the 18 minute 
                  mark, when each of the three elements - piano, orchestra and 
                  choir, seem headed in different directions. But that all stops, 
                  the piano comes back in control, with sweeping, romantic riffs. 
                  From here to the end, it’s piano and orchestra playing meandering 
                  melodies, with the exception of a brief return of the choir. 
                  
                  
                  As much as I like Gavin Bryars’ music - I recently reviewed 
                  another disc of his, which contained a very moving work called 
                  New York (review) 
                  - I found it hard to get interested in these piano works. The 
                  solo works lack overall form, and sound like they each just 
                  contain a number of different, unrelated sections. In fact, 
                  if I listen to this disc without paying attention, it’s hard 
                  to tell where the first piece ends and the second begins. The 
                  Piano Concerto is more interesting, once one realizes that it 
                  is not a concerto, but something about it just doesn’t grab 
                  me. It has its attractive bits, and its being a concerto without 
                  the standard concerto form is interesting. But ultimately, there’s 
                  something missing; it just doesn’t have enough direction to 
                  keep my interest. 
                  
                  Kirk McElhearn 
                  Kirk McElhearn writes about more than just music on his blog 
                  Kirkville 
                  
                
                See also reviews by John 
                  France and Jonathan 
                  Woolf